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Simoneau Emilie M - - 2012
Introduction: The aim of this study was to compare, at a given level of electromyographic (EMG) activity, the behavior of dorsiflexor and plantarflexor muscles as assessed via their architecture (pennation angle and fiber length) during agonist or antagonist isometric contractions. Methods: Real-time ultrasonography and EMG activity of gastrocnemius medialis (GM) ...
Drummond Gordon B - - 2011
Please cite this paper as: Drummond and Tom (2011). How Can We Tell If Frogs Jump Further? Microcirculation 18(6), 512-515.
Roscioni Sara S - - 2011
Dysfunctional regulation of airway smooth muscle tone is a feature of obstructive airway diseases such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Airway smooth muscle contraction is directly associated with changes in the phosphorylation of myosin light chain (MLC), which is increased by Rho and decreased by Rac. Although cyclic ...
Spuler Simone - - 2011
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: New therapeutic strategies in muscular dystrophies will make a difference in prognosis only if they are begun early in the course of the disease. Therefore, we investigated factors that influence the time to diagnosis in muscle dystrophy patients. METHODS: A sample of 101 patients (mean age 49 years; ...
Ritz Thomas - - 2011
Earlier research found autonomic and airway reactivity in asthma patients when they were exposed to blood-injection-injury (BII) stimuli. We studied oscillatory resistance (R(os)) in asthma and BII phobia during emotional and disease-relevant films and examined whether muscle tension counteracts emotion-induced airway constriction. Fifteen asthma patients, 12 BII phobia patients, and ...
Fogli Stefano - - 2011
β₂-Adrenoceptor agonists are important therapeutic agents in the treatment of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The regular use of these drugs has been associated with proasthmatic-like changes that limit their efficacy and increase the risk of severe adverse reactions. We investigated whether the peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)γ agonist rosiglitazone modulated ...
Zaidi Sarah - - 2011
γ-Amino butyric acid (GABA) is a primary inhibitory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system, and is classically released by fusion of synaptic vesicles with the plasma membrane or by egress via GABA transporters (GATs). Recently, a GABAergic system comprised of GABA(A) and GABA(B) receptors has been identified on airway epithelial ...
Bullimore Sharon R - - 2011
Airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) is a characteristic feature of asthma. It has been proposed that an increase in the shortening velocity of airway smooth muscle (ASM) could contribute to AHR. To address this possibility, we tested whether an increase in the isotonic shortening velocity of ASM is associated with an increase ...
Leclere Mathilde - - 2011
Recent studies suggest that airway smooth muscle remodeling is an early event in asthma, but whether it remains a dynamic process late in the course of the disease is unknown. Moreover, little is known about the effects of an antigenic exposure on chronically established smooth muscle remodeling. We measured the ...
Gupta Shruti - - 2010
Nicotine receptors are present in the developing lung yet their function is unknown. The transient role of nicotine receptors in lung development has not been addressed. In this study, nicotine's direct effect on smooth muscle contraction, necessary for mechanosensory-dependent fetal lung development, is examined after transient nicotine stimulation to determine ...
Mazzone Stuart B - - 2010
The airways contain a dense subepithelial microvascular plexus that is involved in the supply and clearance of substances to and from the airway wall. We set out to test the hypothesis that airway smooth muscle reactivity to bronchoconstricting agents may be dependent on airway mucosal blood flow. Immunohistochemical staining identified ...
Kim Hak Rim - - 2011
Actin cytoskeletal remodeling is an important mechanism of airway smooth muscle (ASM) contraction. We tested the hypothesis that mechanical strain modulates the cholinergic receptor-mediated cytoskeletal recruitment of actin-binding and integrin-binding proteins in intact airway smooth muscle, thereby regulating the mechanical energetics of airway smooth muscle. We found that the carbachol-stimulated ...
Schuliga Michael - - 2011
Plasmin, the activated protease product of plasminogen, is involved in collagen remodeling, and is strongly implicated in asthma pathophysiology by recent genome-wide association studies. This study examines plasminogen "activation" by airway smooth muscle cells, and its regulation in a fibrotic environment created by culture on type I collagen and incubation ...
Siddiqui Sana - - 2010
The cause-and-effect relationship between airway smooth muscle (ASM) remodeling and airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) following allergen challenge is not well established. Using a rat model of allergen-induced ASM remodeling we explored the relationship between the site of ASM remodeling and AHR. Brown Norway rats, sensitized and challenged (3 times at 5-day ...
Holgate Stephen T - - 2010
Asthma is a common disorder of the airways which exhibit variable obstruction associated with hyperresponsiveness linked to altered smooth muscle. Although environmental factors are important in the origins and progression of asthma, it is a disorder with high heritability. The identification of ADAM33 (ADAM metallopeptidase domain 33, a disintegrin and ...
Kirstein Frank - - 2010
Airflow in the lungs of patients with allergic asthma is impaired by excessive mucus production and airway smooth muscle contractions. Elevated levels of the cytokines IL-4 and IL-13 are associated with this pathology. In vitro studies have suggested that IL-4 receptor alpha (IL-4Ralpha) signaling on smooth muscle cells is critical ...
Furness M C - - 2010
Recurrent airway obstruction (RAO) in the horse is a disease characterized by reversible bronchoconstriction and by mucus and neutrophil accumulation in the airways. It has been hypothesized that in horses with RAO, remodeling changes occur that are similar to those described in humans with asthma. Although collagen fibrils are present ...
Gleason Neil R - - 2010
Propofol is the anesthetic of choice for patients with reactive airway disease and is thought to reduce intubation- or irritant-induced bronchoconstriction by decreasing the cholinergic component of vagal nerve activation. However, additional neurotransmitters, including neurokinins, play a role in irritant-induced bronchoconstriction. We questioned the mechanistic assumption that the clinically recognized ...
Sakai Hiroyasu - - 2010
Angiotensin II (Ang II) might be an important mediator in the pathogenesis of bronchial asthma, although the mechanisms of airway hyperresponsiveness caused by Ang II are not yet clear. Whether p42/44 ERK contributes to the Ang II-elicited bronchial smooth muscle (BSM) hyperresponsiveness in rats was presently examined. The RT-PCR analyses ...
Schaafsma Dedmer - - 2011
Smooth muscle cells promote fibroproliferative airway remodeling in asthma, and transforming growth factor β1 (TGFβ1) is a key inductive signal. Statins are widely used to treat hyperlipidemia. Growing evidence indicates they also exert a positive impact on lung health, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. We assessed the effects of ...
Hassan Muhannad - - 2010
BACKGROUND: The origin of the excess airway smooth muscle in asthma and when in the course of the disease it is acquired are uncertain. OBJECTIVES: We examined the relative sensitivities of 2 markers of proliferation, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and Ki 67, in airway smooth muscle in vivo and ...
Singh Shailendra R - - 2010
Mesenchyme-derived cells in the airway wall including airway smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts, and myofibroblasts are known to play important roles in airway remodeling. The lack of specific phenotypical markers makes it difficult to define these cell populations in primary cultures. Most relevant studies to date have used animal airway tissues, ...
Jia Shan-Shan - - 2010
Patients with obstructive sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS) often exhibit fatigued or inefficient upper airway dilator muscle activity. It has been shown that estrogen may have some impact on upper airway contractility under normoxic conditions. Chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH) is a frequent feature of OSAHS, and it may alter muscle susceptibility ...
Fernandez-Rodriguez Sofia - - 2010
The mechanisms leading to airway hyper-responsiveness (AHR) in asthma are still not fully understood. AHR could be produced by hypersensitivity of the airway smooth muscle or hyperreactivity of the airways. This study was conducted to ascertain whether AHR in a murine model of asthma is produced by changes at the ...
McTernan C N - - 2010
Neuromuscular blocking agents are often avoided in anticipated difficult airway scenarios. However to facilitate jet ventilation, muscle relaxants are useful. We report a case of a potentially threatened airway in a 21-year-old with a large infraglottic pedunculated polyp. In this case rocuronium was used on induction to facilitate subsequent jet ...
Cox Gerard - - 2010
Asthma, by definition is a variable disease. When there is more than normal natural variation in airflow, asthma can be provoked by a wide range of stimuli that include infectious, allergic, and environmental agents. Bronchoconstriction determines much of the short-term variability in airflow that characterizes asthma. Current treatments do not ...
Johnson L R - - 2010
BACKGROUND: Tracheobronchomalacia is diagnosed in people by documentation of a reduction in airway diameter during bronchoscopy. While tracheal collapse in the dog has been well described in the literature, little information is available on bronchomalacia in the dog. HYPOTHESES: Bronchomalacia is common in dogs with tracheal collapse, is associated with ...
Burki Nausherwan K - - 2010
Evidence has accumulated from previous studies that vagal fibers in the lungs are involved in the genesis of dyspnea. In a series of human studies, based on our previous animal data (J Physiol 1998; 508:109-18; J Appl Physiol 1998; 84:417-24; J Appl Physiol 2003; 95:1315-24) we established that intravenous adenosine ...
Bai Tony R - - 2010
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review focuses on recent findings in relation to potential functional consequences of structural changes in the asthmatic airway. RECENT FINDINGS: Increases in smooth muscle mass have been shown to be an early finding in childhood asthma, related to clinical severity and predictive of greater airflow obstruction. ...
Nassar Taher - - 2010
Reactive airway disease is mediated by smooth muscle contraction initiated through several agonist-dependent pathways. Activation of type 1 N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDA-R1s) by plasminogen activators (PAs) has been linked to control of vascular tone, but their effect on airway smooth muscle contractility has not previously been studied to our knowledge. We ...
Kairaitis Kristina - - 2010
Failure to maintain the patency of the pharyngeal airway during sleep is central to the pathogenesis of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). This failure is hypothesised to be due to the combination of a small pharyngeal airway and inadequate state-dependent neuro-mechanical control. Little is known of how the pharyngeal muscles function ...
Roth Michael - - 2010
A misled or overreacting immune response is assumed to be the major cause of the most prevalent chronic inflammatory lung diseases, asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The contribution of tissue forming cells, especially of airway smooth muscle cells, to the pathologies of both diseases has only recently attracted ...
Skelly J Richard - - 2010
Upper airway muscle dysfunction is implicated in obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome (OSAS), a common respiratory disorder associated with recurrent hypoxaemia. The prevalence of OSAS is higher in males than females. We tested the hypothesis that sex differences exist in the effects of intermittent hypoxia on upper airway muscle function. Adult ...
Xue Ailing - - 2010
Major basic protein (MBP) released from activated eosinophils may influence airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) by either direct effects on airway myocytes or by an indirect effect. In this study, human bronchi, freshly isolated human eosinophils, or MBP purified from human eosinophil granules were incubated for studying eosinophil infiltration and MBP localization. ...
Chiba Yoshihiko - - 2010
Airway hyperresponsiveness to nonspecific stimuli is one of the characteristic features of allergic bronchial asthma. An elevated contractility of bronchial smooth muscle has been considered as one of the causes of the airway hyperresponsiveness. The contraction of smooth muscles including airway smooth muscles is mediated by both Ca²+-dependent and Ca²+-independent ...
Pera Tonio - - 2010
BACKGROUND: A major feature of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is airway remodelling, which includes an increased airway smooth muscle (ASM) mass. The mechanisms underlying ASM remodelling in COPD are currently unknown. We hypothesized that cigarette smoke (CS) and/or lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a major constituent of CS, organic dust and gram-negative ...
Brown Robert H - - 2010
Although airway patency is partially maintained by parenchymal tethering, this structural support is often ignored in many discussions of asthma. However, agonists that induce smooth muscle contraction also stiffen the parenchyma, so such parenchymal stiffening may serve as a defense mechanism to prevent airway narrowing or closure. To quantify this ...
Bossé Ynuk - - 2010
To achieve gas exchange, inspired air must pass through an intricate and dynamic tracheobronchial tree. The tree offers resistance to airflow, and increased resistance is the most important functional change in lung disease. Numerous mechanisms contribute to increased resistance by causing airway narrowing, closure, occlusion, and/or obliteration. Although airway smooth ...
Boss? Ynuk - - 2010
The amplitude of strain in airway smooth muscle (ASM) produced by oscillatory perturbations such as tidal breathing or deep inspiration (DI) influences the force loss in the muscle and is therefore a key determinant of the bronchoprotective and bronchodilatory effects of these breathing maneuvers. The stiffness of unstimulated ASM (passive ...
Franova S - - 2009
Some studies have suggested that the polyphenolic compounds might reduce the occurrence of asthma symptoms. The aim of our experiments was to evaluate the effects of 21 days of the flavonoid Flavin7 administration on experimentally induced airway inflammation in ovalbumin-sensitized guinea pigs. We assessed tracheal smooth muscle reactivity by an ...
Kelly Margaret M - - 2010
BACKGROUND: Combining inhaled corticosteroids with long-acting beta(2)-agonists results in improved asthma symptom control and fewer asthma exacerbations compared with those seen after inhaled corticosteroids alone. However, there are limited data as to whether these beneficial effects are due to enhanced anti-inflammatory actions or whether such combination therapies affect airway remodeling ...
Demanche Annick - - 2009
Swine confinement workers are exposed to various contaminants. These agents can cause airway inflammation and bronchoconstriction. This study was undertaken to evaluate if the bronchoconstrictive effects of swine barn air and settled dust are mediated by endotoxin, and if these effects are directly mediated on airway smooth muscles. Mouse tracheas ...
Dekkers Bart G J - - 2009
Chronic asthma is an inflammatory airways disease characterized by pathological changes in the airway smooth muscle (ASM) bundle that contribute to airway obstruction and hyperresponsiveness. Remodeling of the ASM is associated with an increased smooth muscle mass, involving components of cellular hypertrophy and hyperplasia, and changes in the phenotype of ...
Brook B S - - 2010
This paper presents a modelling framework in which the local stress environment of airway smooth muscle (ASM) cells may be predicted and cellular responses to local stress may be investigated. We consider an elastic axisymmetric model of a layer of connective tissue and circumferential ASM fibres embedded in parenchymal tissue ...
Chin L Y M - - 2010
Airway smooth muscle (ASM) plays a vital role in the exaggerated airway narrowing seen in asthma. However, whether asthmatic ASM is mechanically different from nonasthmatic ASM is unclear. Much of our current understanding about ASM mechanics comes from measurements made in other species. Limited data on human ASM mechanics prevents ...
Silva R A - - 2010
Aerobic training (AT) decreases dyspnoea and exercise-induced bronchospasm, and improves aerobic capacity and quality of life; however, the mechanisms for such benefits remain poorly understood. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the AT effects in a chronic model of allergic lung inflammation in mice after the establishment ...
Verhein Kirsten C - - 2009
Abnormal neural function contributes to the pathogenesis of airway disease. In addition to affecting airway physiology, the nerves produce and release inflammatory mediators, contributing to the recruitment and activation of leukocytes. Activated inflammatory cells in turn affect the function of airway nerves, changing the production and release of neurotransmitters. Cross-talk ...
Chiba Yoshihiko - - 2010
Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is believed to play a role in allergic bronchial asthma, and has been suggested to cause hyperresponsiveness of airway smooth muscle. In the present study, the effects of IL-4 on the expression of RhoA protein, a monomeric GTP-binding protein that contributes to the contraction of smooth muscle, were ...
Kamel Kirollos Salah - - 2009
Despite its probable importance in health and disease, the elastic tissue in the trachea has rarely been investigated. In addition, various aspects of the trachealis muscle are controversial. The aim of this study was to clarify this clinically relevant anatomy. Ten cadaveric tracheobronchial specimens (age range 68-101 years; seven males; ...
Camoretti-Mercado Blanca - - 2009
Asthma is a complex respiratory disease whose incidence has increased worldwide in the last decade. Currently there is no cure for asthma. Although bronchodilator and anti-inflammatory medications are effective medicines in some asthmatic patients, it is clear that an unmet therapeutic need persists for a subpopulation of individuals with severe ...
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