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Imbalance of endogenous prostanoids in moderate-to-severe asthma

Authors :
Masaya Takemura
Akio Niimi
Hisako Matsumoto
Tetsuya Ueda
Masafumi Yamaguchi
Hirofumi Matsuoka
Makiko Jinnai
Kian Fan Chung
Michiaki Mishima
Source :
Allergology International, Vol 66, Iss 1, Pp 83-88 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2017.

Abstract

Background: Inhalation studies suggested “protective” roles of exogenous prostaglandin E2, but the clinical relevance of endogenous prostanoids in asthma is poorly known. The objective of this study is to measure sputum levels of prostanoids in asthmatic patients to correlate with clinical indices. Methods: Mild (n = 41) or moderate-to-severe (19) asthmatics and 27 normal controls were examined for pulmonary function (FEV1 and mid-forced expiratory flow), sputum cell differentials, and sputum levels of prostaglandins D2, E2, F2α, and thromboxane B2 measured by sandwich enzyme immunoassay. Results: Each prostanoid level did not differ among the three groups. Sputum number of bronchial epithelial cells was greater in moderate-to-severe asthmatics than in the other two groups, suggesting epithelial desquamation. Levels of prostaglandin F2α, D2, and thromboxane B2 positively correlated with the severity of airflow obstruction in the 60 asthmatic patients, whereas prostaglandin E2 levels were unrelated to pulmonary function. The ratio of combined “contractile” prostanoids (prostaglandin D2/prostaglandin F2α/thromboxane B2) to prostaglandin E2 was 2.5-fold greater in moderate-to-severe asthmatics than in controls (p = 0.001) or in mild asthmatics (p = 0.0002) but did not differ between the latter two groups. In the two asthmatic groups combined, this ratio positively correlated with the sputum number of epithelial cells. The combined “contractile” prostanoids levels positively correlated with prostaglandin E2 levels in controls and in mild asthmatics but not in moderate-to-severe asthmatics. Conclusions: An imbalance in production, breakdown, or both between prostaglandin E2 and other prostanoids possibly due to epithelial damage may be involved in the pathogenesis of moderate-to-severe asthma.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13238930
Volume :
66
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Allergology International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2e626350452c432190e866ad6e78e318
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.alit.2016.05.013