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Airway and lung elastic fibre is not reduced in asthma nor in asthmatics following corticosteroid treatment.
Eur Respir J. 1995 Jun; 8(6):922-7.ER

Abstract

By morphometric investigation of the relative content of elastic and collagen fibres, we have tested the hypothesis that loss of elastic fibres in the conducting airways and lung parenchyma may reduce tissue elastic recoil, resulting in increased airway maximal closure and apparent increased responsiveness. The study groups comprised: Group A (n = 11) with relatively mild atopic asthma using inhaled bronchodilators prn (i.e. short-term corticosteroids users); Group B (n = 9) with more severe asthma requiring inhaled bronchodilators regularly, and daily inhaled glucocorticosteroids (i.e. longterm corticosteroid users); Group C (n = 12) normal healthy workers. Bronchial biopsy samples were taken from three sites from the left lung. Group A biopsy samples were taken before and after a 4 wk treatment period with inhaled corticosteroids (200 micrograms b.i.d.) and the relative elastic and collagen fibre content of a subepithelial zone was determined from electron micrographs. In a parallel study, the relative proportion of elastic fibre in post mortem lung tissue samples (inner aspect of the bronchial wall, alveolar wall, and points of attachment of surrounding alveoli to intrapulmonary bronchi) from subjects suffering a fatal asthma attack (n = 11), and non-asthmatic suffering sudden death (n = 9), were determined using Miller's elastic and eosin counterstain for light microscopy. In bronchial biopsies of normal subjects, 4.6 (SEM 1.1)% of subepithelial connective tissue was elastic fibre, similar to mild asthmatic subjects, 1.9 (SEM 0.48)%. Neither short-term (4 weeks) inhaled corticosteroid (200 micrograms b.i.d.) nor long-term (< 6 months) treatment with variable doses of inhaled steroids (100-1000 micrograms b.i.d.) significantly altered the elastic or collagen content of the tissue.(

ABSTRACT

TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Authors+Show Affiliations

Dept of Lung Pathology, Royal Brompton NHLI, London, UK.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Clinical Trial
Comparative Study
Journal Article
Randomized Controlled Trial

Language

eng

PubMed ID

7589378

Citation

Godfrey, R W., et al. "Airway and Lung Elastic Fibre Is Not Reduced in Asthma nor in Asthmatics Following Corticosteroid Treatment." The European Respiratory Journal, vol. 8, no. 6, 1995, pp. 922-7.
Godfrey RW, Lorimer S, Majumdar S, et al. Airway and lung elastic fibre is not reduced in asthma nor in asthmatics following corticosteroid treatment. Eur Respir J. 1995;8(6):922-7.
Godfrey, R. W., Lorimer, S., Majumdar, S., Adelroth, E., Johnston, P. W., Rogers, A. V., Johansson, S. A., & Jeffery, P. K. (1995). Airway and lung elastic fibre is not reduced in asthma nor in asthmatics following corticosteroid treatment. The European Respiratory Journal, 8(6), 922-7.
Godfrey RW, et al. Airway and Lung Elastic Fibre Is Not Reduced in Asthma nor in Asthmatics Following Corticosteroid Treatment. Eur Respir J. 1995;8(6):922-7. PubMed PMID: 7589378.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Airway and lung elastic fibre is not reduced in asthma nor in asthmatics following corticosteroid treatment. AU - Godfrey,R W, AU - Lorimer,S, AU - Majumdar,S, AU - Adelroth,E, AU - Johnston,P W, AU - Rogers,A V, AU - Johansson,S A, AU - Jeffery,P K, PY - 1995/6/1/pubmed PY - 1995/6/1/medline PY - 1995/6/1/entrez SP - 922 EP - 7 JF - The European respiratory journal JO - Eur Respir J VL - 8 IS - 6 N2 - By morphometric investigation of the relative content of elastic and collagen fibres, we have tested the hypothesis that loss of elastic fibres in the conducting airways and lung parenchyma may reduce tissue elastic recoil, resulting in increased airway maximal closure and apparent increased responsiveness. The study groups comprised: Group A (n = 11) with relatively mild atopic asthma using inhaled bronchodilators prn (i.e. short-term corticosteroids users); Group B (n = 9) with more severe asthma requiring inhaled bronchodilators regularly, and daily inhaled glucocorticosteroids (i.e. longterm corticosteroid users); Group C (n = 12) normal healthy workers. Bronchial biopsy samples were taken from three sites from the left lung. Group A biopsy samples were taken before and after a 4 wk treatment period with inhaled corticosteroids (200 micrograms b.i.d.) and the relative elastic and collagen fibre content of a subepithelial zone was determined from electron micrographs. In a parallel study, the relative proportion of elastic fibre in post mortem lung tissue samples (inner aspect of the bronchial wall, alveolar wall, and points of attachment of surrounding alveoli to intrapulmonary bronchi) from subjects suffering a fatal asthma attack (n = 11), and non-asthmatic suffering sudden death (n = 9), were determined using Miller's elastic and eosin counterstain for light microscopy. In bronchial biopsies of normal subjects, 4.6 (SEM 1.1)% of subepithelial connective tissue was elastic fibre, similar to mild asthmatic subjects, 1.9 (SEM 0.48)%. Neither short-term (4 weeks) inhaled corticosteroid (200 micrograms b.i.d.) nor long-term (< 6 months) treatment with variable doses of inhaled steroids (100-1000 micrograms b.i.d.) significantly altered the elastic or collagen content of the tissue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) SN - 0903-1936 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/7589378/Airway_and_lung_elastic_fibre_is_not_reduced_in_asthma_nor_in_asthmatics_following_corticosteroid_treatment_ L2 - http://erj.ersjournals.com/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&amp;pmid=7589378 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -