1. Quantitative assessment of airway remodelling and response to allergen in asthma.
- Author
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Adams DC, Miller AJ, Applegate MB, Cho JL, Hamilos DL, Chee A, Holz JA, Szabari MV, Hariri LP, Harris RS, Griffith JW, Luster AD, Medoff BD, and Suter MJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Bronchial Provocation Tests methods, Bronchoscopy methods, Female, Humans, Male, Respiratory Function Tests methods, Airway Remodeling, Allergens immunology, Asthma diagnosis, Asthma immunology, Asthma physiopathology, Lung diagnostic imaging, Lung physiopathology, Respiratory Hypersensitivity diagnosis, Respiratory Hypersensitivity immunology, Respiratory Hypersensitivity physiopathology, Tomography, Optical Coherence methods
- Abstract
Background and Objective: In vivo evaluation of the microstructural differences between asthmatic and non-asthmatic airways and their functional consequences is relevant to understanding and, potentially, treating asthma. In this study, we use endobronchial optical coherence tomography to investigate how allergic airways with asthma differ from allergic non-asthmatic airways in baseline microstructure and in response to allergen challenge., Methods: A total of 45 subjects completed the study, including 20 allergic, mildly asthmatic individuals, 22 non-asthmatic allergic controls and 3 healthy controls. A 3-cm airway segment in the right middle and right upper lobe were imaged in each subject immediately before and 24 h following segmental allergen challenge to the right middle lobe. Relationships between optical airway measurements (epithelial and mucosal thicknesses, mucosal buckling and mucus) and airway obstruction (FEV
1 /FVC (forced expiratory volume in 1 s/forced vital capacity) and FEV1 % (FEV1 as a percentage of predictive value)) were investigated., Results: Significant increases at baseline and in response to allergen were observed for all four of our imaging metrics in the asthmatic airways compared to the non-asthmatic airways. Epithelial thickness and mucosal buckling exhibited a significant relationship to FEV1 /FVC in the asthmatic group., Conclusion: Simultaneous assessments of airway microstructure, buckling and mucus revealed both structural and functional differences between the mildly asthmatic and control groups, with airway buckling seeming to be the most relevant factor. The results of this study demonstrate that a comprehensive, microstructural approach to assessing the airways may be important in future asthma studies as well as in the monitoring and treatment of asthma., (© 2019 Asian Pacific Society of Respirology.)- Published
- 2019
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