Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,488,990 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Asthma pressure may shrink airways.


The chest tightness that an asthma patient experiences may be in part the cause of the disease as well as a symptom.

Most physicians and scientists have believed that inflammation alone causes air passages to gradually narrow in asthmatics. However, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have discovered that the tightening of chest muscles during an asthma attack can trigger long-term changes in airways that constrict con·strict (kn-strkt)
v.
To make smaller or narrower, especially by binding or squeezing.
 the passages.

"Inflammation doesn't explain the whole story," says Barbara Ressler, who is now at Genzyme Corp. in Framingham, Mass. Ressler and her colleagues at MIT and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston realized that cells lining asthma-tightened airways are under lots of mechanical stress.

The researchers examined how that stress might affect the cells in asthmatics. To simulate an asthma attack, Ressler grew airway cells from rats in a culture dish and then applied air pressure to mimic muscle tightening.

Cells under pressure activated the genes for at least three proteins that promote cell growth, the researchers found. These growth factors could cause airway-lining cells to reproduce, eventually thickening the lining and narrowing the air passage, says Ressler.

The growth factors could continue thickening the airway lining long after the muscles relax, Ressler says. Although the thickening could occur even when there's no inflammation, swelling from inflammation would exacerbate the problem, she says.

These results probably won't lead to dramatic new treatments for asthma, Ressler says. Bronchial bronchial /bron·chi·al/ (brong´ke-al) pertaining to or affecting one or more bronchi.

bron·chi·al (brngk
 dilators
1. a structure that dilates, or an instrument used to dilate.
2. dilator muscle.


di·la·tor (d-l
 currently used by many asthmatics do a good job of keeping the air passages open and may reduce the mechanical stress on airway cells, she says.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:T.H.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Apr 22, 2000
Words:262
Previous Article:Now, nylon comes in killer colors.(development of antibacterial coatings for colored nylon fabrics)(Brief Article)
Next Article:Letters.
Topics:



Related Articles
Back-to-school sniffles, sneezes, and wheezes: it is easy for parents and teachers to mistake allergies or asthma for a series of colds.
Breathing lessons. (causes of asthma)
Living With Asthma: Special Concerns for Older Adults.(Pamphlet)
Syncope in an adult with uncontrolled asthma.
Highlights from the annual scientific assembly: patient-centered approaches to asthma management: strategies for treatment and management of asthma....
Asthma.(Featured CME Topic: Allergy)
Effects of inhaled brevetoxins in allergic airways: toxin-allergen interactions and pharmacologic intervention.(Brevetoxins: Mini-Monograph)
Expanding the medicine chest.(Asthma)
Community urbanization and hospitalization of adults for asthma.(Practical Stuff!)
Induction of asthma and the environment: what we know and need to know.(Research: Mini-Monograph)(Disease/Disorder overview)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles