Remodeling and Causes of Persistent Asthma
Over the course of years the repetition of the inflammatory events involved in asthma can cause irreversible structural and functional changes in the airways, a process called remodeling. The remodeled airways are persistently narrow and can cause chronic asthma. Researchers are trying to determine how this process occurs:
Interleukins. Some researchers are looking at potent immune factors, including interleukins 11 and 13. They have been linked to a number of processes possibly involved in remodeling, including scarring in the airways and overgrowth of cells in the smooth muscles that line the airways.
Growth Factors. Compounds known as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) have been observed in the airways of patients with asthma. VEGF is a powerful promoter of cell growth in blood vessel linings and some researchers believe it may be major factor in remodeling.
Genetic Factors
About one-third of all persons with asthma share this condition with another member of their immediate family. Asthma may be more likely to be passed to children from the mother than from the father. Both allergies and asthma are strongly associated with hereditary factors, sharing certain genetic markers, but they are not always inherited together.
Research on the genetics of these conditions is confusing. Of some significant promise, researchers have identified a gene (ADAM33), which has been linked to asthma. The gene regulates one of the enzymes called metalloproteases, which are involved with the smooth muscle in the airway. A mutation of this gene could play a role in airway changes that occur after inflammation.
The Complex Role of Early Infections
The role of early childhood respiratory and intestinal infections is very complex. Viral respiratory infections certainly worsen existing asthma, but the most common ones are unlikely to be causes of childhood asthma. In fact, early respiratory and intestinal infections may offer some protection against asthma.
Early Respiratory Infections as Causes of Asthma. Studies have found little evidence to suggest that most respiratory infections are important causes of asthma in children, except in certain cases. An important exception is the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), which has been implicated in the development of asthma. RSV is the major viral cause of infant pneumonia. (Other respiratory infections may play an important role in many instances of adult-onset asthma.)






Previous Section












