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Lee Young-Cheol - - 2005
Liriope platyphylla is one of the well-known herb used in oriental medicine for treatment asthma and bronchial and lung inflammation. Anti-asthmatic effects of Liriope platyphylla in the development of OVA-induced airway inflammation and murine asthma model have not been fully investigated in vivo. Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of ...
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Black J L - - 2005
Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is associated with abnormal airway smooth muscle that leads to the characteristic pathology of lung nodule formation and destruction of lung tissue. The current authors have previously identified abnormal behaviour of airway smooth muscle cells from patients with asthma. In this study, cells and tissue sections derived from ...
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Terawaki Kan - - 2005
Bronchial asthma is an increasingly common disorder that remains poorly understood and difficult to manage. The disease is characterized by airway hyperresponsiveness, chronic inflammation, and mucus overproduction. Based on the finding that leukotriene B4 receptor 1 (BLT1) is expressed highly in Th2 lymphocytes, we analyzed the roles of BLT1 using ...
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Dombrowicz David - - 2005
NKT cells are key actors at the interface between innate and acquired immunity. Indeed, upon activation by glycolipid antigens, they rapidly secrete both Th1 and Th2 cytokines, which affects the development of later immune responses. Previous studies have shown that NKT cells are essential for the development of allergic asthma, ...
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Howarth P H - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) is a major therapeutic target in a range of chronic inflammatory disorders characterised by a Th1 type immune response in which TNFalpha is generated in excess. By contrast, asthma is regarded as a Th2 type disorder, especially when associated with atopy. However, as asthma ...
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Seroogy Christine M - - 2005
As a chronic inflammatory disease, much of the research related to asthma has been focused on proinflammatory mechanisms. Recently, advances have been made in defining mechanisms that control inflammation and induce immune tolerance to specific antigens. Subsets of CD4(+) cells known as T regulatory cells play an important role in ...
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Wills-Karp Marsha - - 2005
Despite extensive inquiry, the mechanisms underlying the pathophysiology of allergic diseases remain unknown. Recently, there has been a resurgence of interest in the role of the innate immune mediators of the complement pathway in asthma pathogenesis, particularly the anaphylatoxins (C3a, C5a). The emerging paradigm is that C3a production at the ...
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van Rijt L S - - 2005
Allergic asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases in western society, characterized by variable airway obstruction, mucus hypersecretion and infiltration of the airway wall with T-helper type 2 (Th2) cells, eosinophils and mast cells. If we are to devise new causal therapies for this disease, it is important ...
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Gordon John R - - 2005
Splenic CD8alpha+ dendritic cells reportedly tolerize T cell responses by inducing Fas ligand-mediated apoptosis, suppressing IL-2 expression, or catabolizing T cell tryptophan reserves through expression of IDO. We report in this study that CD8alpha+, but not CD8alpha-, dendritic cells purified from the spleens of normal mice can tolerize the Th2 ...
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Caramori Gaetano - - 2005
Asthmatic inflammation involves the recruitment and activation of inflammatory cells, and changes in the structural cells of the lung and asthma are characterized by an increased expression of components of the inflammatory cascade including cytokines, chemokines, growth factors, enzymes, receptors and adhesion molecules. The increased expression of these proteins seen ...
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Huynh Mai-Lan N - - 2005
RATIONALE: Clearance of apoptotic cells is crucial to the resolution of inflammation and development of fibrosis, but the process is not well understood in normal or diseased human lungs. OBJECTIVES: To determine phagocytosis of apoptotic cells by primary human alveolar macrophages and whether defects in uptake of apoptotic cells are ...
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Kelly-Welch Ann - - 2005
Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is a cytokine produced by T(H)2 type helper T cells and by mast cells, basophils, and eosinophils. This cytokine can elicit many responses, some of which are associated with allergy and asthma. Studies with long-term cell lines and primary cells have revealed differences in the signaling between these ...
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Dinda Amit - - 2005
The immunosuppressive as well as modulatory effects of morphine have been known in clinical medicine for > 100 years. Recent developments in molecular immunology, including experiments in mu (mu) opioid receptor knockout mice has led to a better understanding of central and peripheral mechanisms involved in this process. Though there ...
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Virág László - - 2005
Inhibition of poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation in oxidative stress-related pathologies has recently emerged as a very effective anti-inflammatory intervention in animal models of arthritis, colitis, diabetes and shock. Recent data from three laboratories also support the role of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) activation in asthma. Similarly to other inflammatory conditions, the protective effects of ...
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Holt Patrick G - - 2005
The term asthma refers to a spectrum of wheezing syndromes resulting from airways inflammation triggered by a range of environmental stimuli, the most important of which are aeroallergens and viruses. We describe below a model for the cause of atopic asthma in which discrete sets of developmental factors governing the ...
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Lukacs Nicholas W - - 2005
The incidence of asthma has continued to rise worldwide with the number of severe asthmatic episodes dramatically increasing especially in children. Over the past several years researchers have realized that by controlling the influx of inflammatory cells that damage the airway and perpetuate the chronic responses, asthmatic disease can be ...
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Vine G J - - 2005
Many features of microorganisms make them pre-eminently suitable for study by microcalorimetry. They have thus, in the past, been the basis of fundamental studies in metabolism and cellular physiology. In this review we look at the application of calorimetry to the impact of bacteria and fungi on the pharmaceutical industry ...
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Bruce Colleen - - 2005
This pilot study was designed to assess whether a synthetic matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitor has anti-inflammatory properties in mild asthma. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) has been shown to be an important cytokine in the pathogenesis of allergic airway inflammatory responses, and its release can be inhibited by MMP inhibitors. ...
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Bochner Bruce S - - 2005
Initiation and regulation of allergic inflammation is influenced by many factors, including cell type, membrane receptors, and mediators generated. Furthermore, the altered response of targeted tissues (ie, airway smooth muscle) becomes important to the eventual expression of asthma. Finally, the genetic regulation and association of genetic polymorphisms has enhanced our ...
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Hogaboam C M - - 2005
The innate immune and acquired immune responses are not separate, parallel systems but form interdependent components of a single integrated immune response. This is nicely highlighted by an expanding database demonstrating that the innate immune response provides the acquired immune response with information about the origin of the antigen and ...
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Macdougall Iain C - - 2005
Although epoetin-induced antibody (Ab)-mediated pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) was very rare prior to 1998, a large increase in the number of global cases was observed from 1999 to 2002 in patients treated with erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) for the anaemia associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD). The number of global ...
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Busse William - - 2005
Systemically bioavailable leukotriene receptor antagonists (LTRAs) can reduce the essential components of allergic inflammation in allergic rhinitis (AR) and asthma by blocking cysteinyl leukotriene (CysLT) activity, resulting in a wide range of clinical effects. CysLTs, mediators, and modulators in the pathophysiology of asthma and AR are a key target for ...
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Meyers Jennifer Hartt - - 2005
The newly identified TIM family of proteins is associated with regulation of T helper type 1 (T(H)1) and T(H)2 immune responses. TIM-1 is genetically linked to asthma and is a receptor for hepatitis A virus, but the endogenous ligand of TIM-1 is not known. Here we show that TIM-4, which ...
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Cockcroft Donald W - - 2005
ABSTRACT : Numerous recombinant therapies are being investigated for the treatment of asthma. This report reviews the current status of several of these novel agents. Anti-immunoglobulin (Ig)E (omalizumab, Xolair) markedly inhibits all aspects of the allergen challenge in subjects who have reduction of free serum IgE to undetectable levels. Several ...
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Pauluhn Jürgen - - 2005
Asthma is defined as a chronic disease of the entire lung and asthma attacks may either be immediate, delayed or dual in onset. Allergic asthma is a complex chronic inflammatory disease of the airways and its etiology is multifactorial. It involves the recruitment and activation of many inflammatory and structural ...
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Agrawal Devendra K - - 2005
Several genes, including ADAM33, DPP10, PHF11, GPRA, and TIM-1, have been implicated in the pathogenesis and susceptibility to atopy and asthma. Advances have been made in defining the mechanism for the control of allergic airway inflammation in response to inhaled antigens. There is growing evidence that associates asthma with a ...
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Chen Qingsheng - - 2005
IL-13 is a major stimulator of inflammation and tissue remodeling at sites of Th2 inflammation. In Th2-dominant inflammatory disorders such as asthma, IL-11 is simultaneously induced. However, the relationship(s) between IL-11 and IL-13 in these responses has not been defined, and the role(s) of IL-11 in the genesis of the ...
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Ennis Darren P - - 2005
The prevalence of asthma and allergic disease has increased in many countries and there has been speculation that immunization promotes allergic sensitization. Bordetella pertussis infection exacerbates allergic asthmatic responses. We investigated whether whole-cell pertussis vaccine (Pw) enhanced or prevented B. pertussis induced exacerbation of allergic asthma. Groups of mice were ...
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Kraneveld Aletta D - - 2005
The observation that only 50% of patients with adult asthma manifest atopy indicates that other inflammatory mechanisms are likely involved in producing the characteristic features of this disorder; namely reversible airway obstruction, hyperresponsiveness, and pulmonary inflammation. Our recent discovery that antigen-specific Ig free light chains (LCs) mediate hypersensitivity-like responses suggests ...
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Tillie-Leblond I - - 2005
Severe acute asthma can be induced by different triggers, allergens, irritants, viruses, etc., which induce inflammation and provoke acute bronchoconstriction. Inflammatory cells, such as activated eosinophils and neutrophils identified in sputum and bronchial lavages (BL) in severe acute asthma from children and adults are associated with increased levels of IL-5, ...
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Kikuchi Shinya - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Eosinophils are generally recognized as effector cells in asthma. Recently, neutrophils have been suggested to contribute to the development of chronic severe asthma. The mechanisms by which neutrophils contribute to the pathophysiology of asthma remain to be elucidated; however, neutrophils may affect either accumulation or functional status of eosinophils ...
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Krommydas G - - 2005
Laboratory and clinical data provide evidence that a biological linkage exists between asthma and depression. Cytokines are key molecules in both diseases. They promote allergic reaction as well as depressive symptomatology. Antidepressants may have a therapeutic role in asthma by suppressing production of proinflammatory cytokines, inducing production of anti-inflammatory ones ...
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Walsh Garry M - - 2005
It is now widely accepted that airway inflammation is the key factor underlying the pathogenesis of asthma. While corticosteroids remain the most important anti-inflammatory treatment for asthma they are rather non-specific in their actions. Their use also raises concerns over side effects and compliance issues, particularly in children and adolescents. ...
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O'Sullivan Siobhán M - - 2005
Despite advances in the understanding of the pathophysiology of asthma and the availability of effective treatment, the World Health Organization estimates that asthma accounts for 1 in every 250 deaths worldwide. Viruses are associated with half of all asthma exacerbations. The immune response to viral infection may enhance preexisting airway ...
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Mapp Cristina E - - 2005
Developments in the understanding of causes and natural history of asthma induced by isocyanates may allow improved preventive strategies for occupational asthma (OA), and may also lead to improved understanding of mechanisms involved in IgE-independent nonoccupational asthma. Studies of genetic markers in OA induced by isocyanates suggest that HLA class ...
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Murr Christian - - 2005
In addition to genetic predisposition, a lack of triggers for Th1 immune response like exposure to infections, endotoxins and dirt in childhood are supposed to be responsible for the higher incidence of allergic rhinitis and asthma (hygiene hypothesis). In vitro, beverages rich in antioxidants like green tea and wine were ...
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Yao Pei-Li - - 2005
BACKGROUND: Theophylline has been used widely as a bronchodilator for the treatment of bronchial asthma and has been suggested to modulate immune response. While the importance of macrophages in asthma has been reappraised and emphasized, their significance has not been well investigated. We conducted a genome-wide profiling of the gene ...
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Doherty Dennis E - - 2004
Asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are distinct inflammatory disorders with differing pathophysiologic mechanisms, different clinical courses, and, therefore, distinct treatment strategies. Whereas in asthma airflow limitation is typically episodic and reversible, airflow limitation in COPD is progressive and only partially reversible. In contrast to asthma, which is characterized ...
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Matheson Joanna M - - 2005
Isocyanate-induced asthma, which is the most common type of occupational asthma, has been difficult to diagnose and control, in part, because the biological mechanisms responsible for the disease and the determinants of exposure are not fully defined. To help address these issues, we recently established a murine model of toluene ...
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Wills-Karp Marsha - - 2004
Bronchial asthma is a complex disorder that is thought to arise as a result of aberrant T-lymphocyte responses to noninfectious environmental antigens. In particular, the symptoms of asthma are closely associated with the presence of activated T-helper 2 cell (Th2) cytokine-producing cells [interleukin (IL)-4, IL-5, IL-9, and IL-13] in the ...
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Noverr Mairi C - - 2004
Perturbations in the gastrointestinal (GI) microbiota composition that occur as a result of antibiotics and diet in "westernized" countries are strongly associated with allergies and asthma ("hygiene hypothesis"). The microbiota ("microflora") plays a crucial role in the development of mucosal tolerance, including the airways. Significant attention has been focused on ...
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Oflazoglu Ezogelin - - 2004
Programmed death-1 ligand 2 (PD-L2) is a ligand for programmed death-1 (PD-1), a receptor that plays an inhibitory role in T cell activation. Since previous studies have shown up-regulation of PD-L2 expression by Th2 cytokines, and asthma is driven by a Th2 response, we hypothesized that PD-L2 might be involved ...
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Steinke John W - - 2004
Interleukin 4 (IL-4) mediates important pro-inflammatory functions in asthma, including T helper cell type 2 lymphocyte differentiation, induction of IgE production, up-regulation of IgE receptors, expression of vascular cell-adhesion molecule 1, promotion of eosinophil transmigration into the lungs, inhibition of T-lymphocyte apoptosis, and mucus hypersecretion. The role of IL-4 in ...
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Thomson N C - - 2004
In most developed countries approximately 25% of adults with asthma are current cigarette smokers. Asthma and active cigarette smoking interact to cause more severe symptoms, accelerated decline in lung function, and impaired short-term therapeutic response to corticosteroids. Cigarette smoking may modify inflammation that is associated with asthma, although there is ...
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Valstar, Dingena Labine
Asthma is a very common disorder and its prevalence has increased over the past two to three decades. The proportion of cases attributable to occupational exposure at the workplace is estimated at ~10% of adult-onset asthma. Most cases of occupational asthma are caused by low molecular weight (LMW) compounds. These ...
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Takizawa Hajime - - 2004
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: It has been demonstrated that particulate air pollutants such as diesel exhaust particles (DEPs) are associated with allergic respiratory disorders, including asthma and allergic rhinitis. Recent in-vivo and in-vitro studies strongly suggest that DEPs induce both anti-inflammatory and proinflammatory products by activating their transcription. If pollutants are ...
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Norris Reinero Carol R - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Animal models are used to mimic human asthma, however, not all models replicate the major characteristics of the human disease. Spontaneous development of asthma with hallmark features similar to humans has been documented to occur with relative frequency in only one animal species, the cat. We hypothesized that we ...
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Heijink I H - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Airway inflammation in asthma is orchestrated by recruitment of T helper (Th)2 lymphocytes to the lung and subsequent production of Th2-like cytokines upon allergen challenge. OBJECTIVE: To examine whether allergen-induced dysfunction of the beta2-adrenergic receptor (beta2-AR) contributes to the enhanced T(h2) cell activity in asthma. METHODS: Beta2-adrenergic regulation of ...
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Luster Andrew D - - 2004
Recruitment of T cells to the airways is crucial in the pathogenesis of asthma, and it is thought to be mediated mainly by peptide chemokines. By contrast, lipid mediators such as leukotrienes and prostaglandins have classically been thought to contribute to asthma pathogenesis by other mechanisms. However, as we discuss ...
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Ichinose Masakazu - - 2004
Increasing evidence of the pathological roles of multiple cytokines in orchestrating and perpetuating inflammation in asthma has prompted the evaluation of novel anti-cytokine therapies. Anti-IL-5 antibody markedly reduces peripheral blood and airway eosinophils, but does not appear to be effective in symptomatic asthma. Inhibition of IL-4, despite promising early results ...
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