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. 1996 Jul;154(1):224-30.
doi: 10.1164/ajrccm.154.1.8680684.

Cellular infiltration of the airways in asthma of varying severity

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Cellular infiltration of the airways in asthma of varying severity

M Synek et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1996 Jul.

Abstract

We have tested the hypothesis that airway infiltration by inflammatory cells reflects the severity of asthma by comparing the inflammatory cell infiltrates in fatal severe asthma and in subjects with mild to moderate asthma who died of unrelated causes. Sections of lung tissue from 25 fatal asthma cases and eight asthmatics who died of unrelated causes were immunostained by monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) using streptavidin-biotin peroxidase technique. The following cells were identified: mast cells (AA1:tryptase), eosinophils (EG1:stored cationic protein and EG2: secretory form of cationic protein), monocytes/macrophages (CD68), neutrophils (elastase), CD3+ and CD8+ T cells (CD3 polyclonal Ab and CD8+ mAb, respectively). Positive cells were counted in the epithelium and airway wall. The airways were divided into two groups: larger airways with internal perimeter (Pi) > 2 mm and smaller airways with Pi < 2 mm. All airways together were studied first, followed by larger and smaller airways examined separately. The numbers of intraepithelial CD3+ T cells were significantly lower in fatal asthma than in mild-moderate asthma both when all airways were considered (0.35 versus 0.86 cells/mm, p = 0.034) and in the larger airways alone (0.08 versus 1.05 cells/mm, p = 0.039). The numbers of EG1- and EG2-positive eosinophils infiltrating the airway wall of the larger airways were greater in fatal asthma than in mild-moderate asthma (78.2 versus 22.8 cells/mm2, p = 0.012 and 138.1 versus 31.7 cells/mm2, p = 0.022). In the smaller airways no significant difference was found between the two groups. We conclude that in fatal asthma there is a redistribution of CD3+ T cells away from the epithelium and proximal enhancement of the eosinophil inflammatory infiltrate. These findings have implications for the pathophysiology of asthma that results in death.

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Comment in

  • Eosinophils and T cells in fatal asthma.
    Jahnsen FL, Brandtzaeg P. Jahnsen FL, et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1997 Mar;155(3):1167-8. doi: 10.1164/ajrccm.155.3.9117005. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 1997. PMID: 9117005 No abstract available.

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