Search Results
Results 401 - 450 of 1404
< 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 >
Landgraf Maristella A - - 2008
Nutritional deficiency is commonly associated with a significantly impaired immune response, particularly in relation to cell-mediated immunity, the complement system, cytokine production and phagocyte function. However, there are few data on the consequences of nutritional deficiency in allergic diseases of the lung. In fact, malnutrition is the most common cause ...
Pennings Jeroen L A - - 2008
To identify gene expression responses common to multiple pulmonary diseases we collected microarray data for acute lung inflammation models from 12 studies and used these in a meta-analysis. The data used include exposures to air pollutants; bacterial, viral, and parasitic infections; and allergic asthma models. Hierarchical clustering revealed a cluster ...
Porter Joanna C - - 2008
Tissue injury and inflammation lead to leukocyte recruitment from the bloodstream into the inflamed organ. Because leukocytes in excessive numbers and over prolonged periods can cause tissue damage, it is important that the trafficking of leukocytes is regulated. Although much attention has been focused on leukocyte recruitment, much less is ...
Yao Hongwei - - 2008
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a global health problem. As understanding of pathology of COPD has increased it has been established that COPD is associated with the progressive pulmonary inflammation and destruction of lung parenchyma (emphysema) that relate to disease severity. Therefore, it is anticipated that drugs that reduce ...
Suzuki Tomoko - - 2008
The lung, with its enormous surface area, is literally 'bathed in a sea' of potential toxins that include pathogenic microorganisms, allergens, and pollutants. To preserve homeostasis and protect itself from injury, the lung has evolved intricate defense systems that guard it from these injurious agents. This chapter will focus on ...
Kuwano Kazuyoshi - - 2008
Lung epithelium is the primary site of lung damage in interstitial lung diseases. Although there are various initiating factors, the terminal stages are characterized by pulmonary fibrosis. Conventional therapy consisting of glucocorticoids or immunosuppressive drugs is usually ineffective. Epithelial cell apoptosis have been considered to be initial events in interstitial ...
Demling Robert H - - 2008
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study is to present a multifaceted, definitive review of the past and current status of smoke inhalation injury. History along with current understanding of anatomical, physiology, and biologic components will be discussed. METHODS: The literature has been reviewed from the early onset of the concept ...
Stewart James P - - 2008
BACKGROUND: The tachykinins are implicated in neurogenic inflammation and the neuropeptide substance P in particular has been shown to be a proinflammatory mediator. A role for the tachykinins in host response to lung challenge has been previously demonstrated but has been focused predominantly on the release of the tachykinins from ...
Brandsma Corry-Anke - - 2008
BACKGROUND: Smoking is the most important cause for the development of COPD. Since not all smokers develop COPD, it is obvious that other factors must be involved in disease development. We hypothesize that heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), a protective enzyme against oxidative stress and inflammation, is insufficiently upregulated in COPD. The ...
Bhavsar Tapan - - 2008
This study examined the role of endothelin-1 (ET-1) in recruiting inflammatory cells to the lung after induction of injury with either lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or cigarette smoke. Hamsters injected with either ET-1 or its precursor peptide (Big ET-1) prior to treatment with LPS or cigarette smoke had markedly increased concentrations of ...
Banerjee Shuvojit - - 2008
Cigarette smoke-induced cellular and molecular mechanisms of lung injury are not clear. Cigarette smoke is a complex mixture containing long-lived radicals, including p-benzosemiquinone that causes oxidative damage. Earlier we had reported that oxidative protein damage is an initial event in smoke-induced lung injury. Considering that p-benzosemiquinone may be a causative ...
Lungarella Giuseppe - - 2008
The purpose of this review was to modify the prevailing view that neutrophil elastase (NE) is mainly a matrix-degrading enzyme. Recent observations indicate that the role of NE in inflammation is more complex than the simple degradation of extra-cellular matrix components. Several lines of evidence suggest that NE aims specifically ...
Kallapur Suhas G - - 2007
In a model of human chorioamnionitis, fetal sheep exposed to a single injection, but not repeated injections, of intra-amniotic endotoxin develop lung injury responses. We hypothesized that repeated exposure to intra-amniotic endotoxin induces endotoxin tolerance. Fetal sheep were given intra-amniotic injections of saline (control) or Escherichia coli LPS O55:B5 (10 ...
Pardo Annie - - 2008
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a devastating, lethal and currently untreatable lung disorder of unknown etiology. It is characterized by epithelial injury and activation, fibroblastic foci formation, and exaggerated accumulation of extracellular matrix (ECM) with the destruction of the lung parenchyma. Despite important progress in our understanding of the general ...
Lee Hyeon-Soo - - 2008
Mechanical ventilation plays a central role in the pathogenesis of bronchopulmonary dysplasia. However, the mechanisms by which excessive stretch of fetal or neonatal type II epithelial cells contributes to lung injury are not well defined. In these investigations, isolated embryonic day 19 fetal rat type II epithelial cells were cultured ...
Journeay, William Shane
A growing demand for information on the human health and environmental effects of materials produced using nanotechnology has led to a new area of investigation known as nanotoxicology. Research in this field has widespread implications in facilitating the medical applications of nanomaterials but also in addressing occupational and environmental toxicity ...
Medicherla Satyanarayana - - 2008
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by pulmonary inflammation, which is relatively insensitive to inhaled corticosteroids. The extent of the pulmonary inflammation in COPD correlates with disease severity, and it is thought to play a significant role in disease progression. We have evaluated a selective p38alpha-selective mitogen-activated protein kinase ...
Geudens Nele - - 2007
BACKGROUND: The warm ischemic period in non-heart-beating donor lungs may contribute to a higher degree of ischemia-reperfusion injury after lung transplantation. We investigated the impact and timing of administration of N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) on inflammatory parameters. METHODS: Ischemia (I) was induced by clamping the hilum of the left lung for ...
Milman Nils - - 2007
BACKGROUND: Sarcoid granuloma formation involves the orchestration of cytokines and chemokines, which modulate the host's immune response to the antigen stimulus. The release of cytokines enhances expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokine tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF), which plays a crucial role in the formation of sarcoid granuloma, being released from T-lymphocytes ...
Oeckler R A - - 2007
Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) represent a continuum of injury that may arise from a number of primary insults. Localised injury may progress due to trauma from mechanical ventilation, a finding that has led to intense debate in the clinical and experimental literature over optimal ...
Kuwano Kazuyoshi - - 2007
Lung epithelium is the primary site of lung damage in various lung diseases. Epithelial cell apoptosis has been considered to be initial event in various lung diseases. Apoptosis signaling is classically composed of two principle pathways. One is a direct pathway from death receptor ligation to caspase cascade activation and ...
Lagan Anna L - - 2008
Changes in iron homeostatic responses routinely accompany infectious or proinflammatory insults. The systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and the development of acute lung injury (ALI) feature pronounced systemic and lung-specific alterations in iron/heme mobilization and decompartmentalization; such responses may be of pathological significance for both the onset and progression of ...
Yim Yun-Kyoung - - 2010
Perillae fructus (perilla seed) is a traditional medicinal herb used to treat bronchial asthma in Oriental medical clinics. ST36 is one of the most widely used acupuncture points, particularly for immune system regulation. Injection of an herbal extract into an acupuncture point (herbal acupuncture) is a therapeutic technique combining both ...
Gharaee-Kermani Mehrnaz - - 2007
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a chronic, progressive and often fatal form of interstitial lung disease. It is characterized by injury with loss of lung epithelial cells and abnormal tissue repair, resulting in abnormal accumulation of fibroblasts and myofibroblasts, deposition of extracellular matrix and distortion of lung architecture, leading to respiratory ...
Senthil Maheswari - - 2007
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that gut-derived factors carried in trauma-hemorrhagic shock (T/HS) lymph is sufficient to induce lung injury. Additionally, because our previous studies showed that T/HS-induced nitric oxide production was associated with lung injury, we examined whether T/HS lymph-induced lung injury occurs via an inducible nitric oxide synthase ...
Garantziotis Stavros - - 2007
BACKGROUND: Alloimmune lung injury, characterized by perivascular lymphocytic inflammation, lymphocytic bronchiolitis (LB), and obliterative bronchiolitis (OB), causes substantial morbidity and mortality after lung transplantation and bone marrow transplantation (BMT), but little is known regarding its pathogenesis. We have developed and pursued the hypothesis that local activation of pulmonary innate immunity ...
Wösten-van Asperen R M - - 2008
Ventilator-induced lung injury is characterised by inflammation and apoptosis, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. The present study proposed a role for angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) via angiotensin II (Ang II) and/or bradykinin in acute lung injury. The authors assessed whether ACE and, if so, Ang II and/or bradykinin are ...
Li Hui - - 2008
Chronic inhalation of high concentrations of respirable quartz particles has been implicated in various lung diseases including lung fibrosis and cancer. Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative stress is considered a major mechanism of quartz toxicity. Curcumin, a yellow pigment from Curcuma longa, has been considered as nutraceutical ...
Ivanov Stefan - - 2007
Naive CD4 cells are capable of integrating signals from antigen-activated cells of the innate immune system and differentiating into effector CD4 cells, also termed T helper (Th) cells. According to the traditional paradigm explaining adaptive CD4 cell responses, there are two subsets of Th cells: the Th-1 and Th-2 subset. ...
Hoth J Jason - - 2007
Blunt chest trauma resulting in pulmonary contusion with an accompanying acute inflammatory response is a common but poorly understood injury. We report that Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2 participates in the inflammatory response to lung injury. To show this, we use a model of pulmonary contusion in the mouse that is ...
Seaborn Tommy - - 2007
Tracheal occlusion (TO) is known to stimulate lung growth. The aim of this research is to investigate early cellular responses to TO during perinatal growth in order to identify cellular targets in fetal mouse lungs that respond rapidly to surgically induced stretch. TO, or sham-TO, surgery was performed at 16.5 ...
Annadurai D - - 2007
Acute toxicity of the venom of Conus zeylanicus was studied to evaluate its risk and toxic factors in view of human safety The lethality of the crude venom (LD50 -60 mg/kg via i.p.) in mice was associated with increased heart rate and strong muscular hind limb paralysis, skeletal muscle paralysis, ...
Hollingsworth John W - - 2007
Exposure to ozone in air pollution in urban environments is associated with increases in pulmonary-related hospitalizations and mortality. Because ozone also alters clearance of pulmonary bacterial pathogens, we hypothesized that inhalation of ozone modifies innate immunity in the lung. To address our hypothesis, we exposed C57BL/6J mice to either free ...
Flierl Michael A - - 2007
It is becoming increasingly clear that the autonomic nervous system and the immune system demonstrate cross-talk during inflammation by means of sympathetic and parasympathetic pathways. We investigated whether phagocytes are capable of de novo production of catecholamines, suggesting an autocrine/paracrine self-regulatory mechanism by catecholamines during inflammation, as has been described ...
Fujimoto Hajime - - 2007
RATIONALE: Cytokines secreted by T cells play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of lung injury and fibrosis, and the transcription factors nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB and activator protein (AP)-1 are involved in the expression of cytokines from T cells during lung injury. OBJECTIVES: We assessed the potential therapeutic effect of ...
Li Yuan - - 2007
The lung is an organ for host defense to clear up pathogens through innate and adaptive immunity. This process involves up-regulation of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines that lead to activation of the signal transducers and activators of the transcription 3 (Stat3) signaling pathway. Overexpression of Stat3C in alveolar type II ...
Guo Yong - - 2008
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is an acute respiratory disease with significant morbidity and mortality. While its clinical manifestations have been extensively studied, its pathogenesis is not yet fully understood. A limited number of autopsy studies have revealed that the lungs and the immune system are the organs that sustain ...
Cardile Venera - - 2007
Many asbestos-like mineral fibers have been detected in the air of mountainous and volcanic areas of Italy and other parts of the world. These fibers have been suspected to be the cause of increased incidences of lung cancer and other lung diseases in these areas. However, the mechanisms of the ...
Kai Yoshiro - - 2007
Pulmonary fibrosis is characterized by an accumulation of inflammatory cells in the lung interstitium, followed by an increased deposition of extracellular matrix. Macrophages play a vital role in this disease by mediating the progression from inflammation to fibrosis, but the mechanisms by which macrophages are retained at these sites are ...
Joo Myungsoo - - 2007
Although mainly expressed in neuronal cells, lipocalin-type PGD synthase (L-PGDS) is detected in the macrophages infiltrated to atherosclerotic plaques. However, the regulation and significance of L-PGDS expression in macrophages are unknown. Here, we found that treatment of macrophages with bacterial endotoxin (LPS) or Pseudomonas induced L-PGDS expression. Epigenetic suppression of ...
du Bois Roland M - - 2007
Scleroderma (systemic sclerosis) is characterized by dermal thickening and is subclassified, on the basis of the pattern of skin involvement, as diffuse or limited cutaneous disease. The lung fibrosis associated with systemic sclerosis is histopathologically nonspecific interstitial pneumonia and occurs to various extents. A key determinant of the development of ...
de Lang Anna - - 2007
The pathogenesis of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) is likely mediated by disproportional immune responses and the ability of the virus to circumvent innate immunity. Using functional genomics, we analyzed early host responses to SARS-CoV infection in the lungs of adolescent cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) that show lung pathology ...
von Wulffen Werner - - 2007
RATIONALE: Strategically located beneath the alveolar epithelial barrier, dendritic cells (DCs) of the lung are centrally involved in the sampling and processing of inhaled antigens. However, the contribution of DCs to acute lung inflammation induced by inhaled bacterial toxins is largely unknown. OBJECTIVES: To determine the effect of increased lung ...
Gauldie J - - 2007
Transient adenovirus-mediated gene transfer of active TGF-beta1 (transforming growth factor-beta1) induces severe and progressive fibrosis in rodent lung without apparent inflammation. Alternatively, transfer of IL-1beta (interleukin 1beta) induces marked tissue injury and inflammation, which develops into progressive fibrosis, associated with an increase in TGF-beta1 concentrations in lung fluid and tissue. ...
Brown Lou Ann S - - 2007
Acute lung injury affects close to 200,000 people in the United States annually and leads to death in 40-50% of the affected patients. Chronic ethanol abuse is thought to contribute to up to 40-50% of subjects who develop acute lung injury. We previously demonstrated in a rat model that chronic ...
Mitchell Leah A - - 2007
Inhalation of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) at particle concentrations ranging from 0.3 to 5 mg/m3 did not result in significant lung inflammation or tissue damage, but caused systemic immune function alterations. C57BL/6 adult (10- to 12-week) male mice were exposed by whole-body inhalation to control air or 0.3, 1, or ...
Karaolis David K R - - 2007
Innate immunity is the primary mechanism by which extracellular bacterial pathogens are effectively cleared from the lung. We have previously shown that cyclic di-GMP (c-di-GMP [c-diguanylate]) is a novel small molecule immunomodulator and immunostimulatory agent that triggers protective host innate immune responses. Using a murine model of bacterial pneumonia, we ...
Willis Brigham C - - 2007
Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a process whereby fully differentiated epithelial cells undergo transition to a mesenchymal phenotype giving rise to fibroblasts and myofibroblasts, is increasingly recognized as playing an important role in repair and scar formation following epithelial injury. The extent to which this process contributes to fibrosis following injury in ...
Hwang S-K - - 2007
The long-term survival of lung cancer patients treated with conventional therapies remains poor and therefore the need for novel approaches remains high. This has led to the re-emergence of aerosol delivery as a therapeutic intervention. In this study, glucosylated polyethylenimine (GPEI) was used as carrier to investigate programmed cell death ...
Gao Hongwei - - 2007
The expanding knowledge involving the cytokine transcription factor network has provided new insights into the acute lung inflammatory response. There are numerous lung inflammatory diseases that at present lack effective treatment (adult respiratory distress syndrome, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, asthma and so on). Although cytokines themselves and ...
< 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 >