6 resultados para ASTHMATIC AIRWAYS
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Obstructive sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome (OSAHS) is the periodic reduction or cessation of airflow during sleep. The syndrome is associated whit loud snoring, disrupted sleep and observed apnoeas. Surgery aims to alleviate symptoms of daytime sleepiness, improve quality of life and reduce the signs of sleep apnoea recordered by polysomnography. Surgical intervention for snoring and OSAHS includes several procedures, each designed to increase the patency of the upper airway. Procedures addressing nasal obstruction include septoplasty, turbinectomy, and radiofrequency ablation (RF) of the turbinates. Surgical procedures to reduce soft palate redundancy include uvulopalatopharyngoplasty with or without tonsillectomy, uvulopalatal flap, laser-assisted uvulopalatoplasty, and RF of the soft palate. More significant, however, particularly in cases of severe OSA, is hypopharyngeal or retrolingual obstruction related to an enlarged tongue, or more commonly due to maxillomandibular deficiency. Surgeries in these cases are aimed at reducing the bulk of the tongue base or providing more space for the tongue in the oropharynx so as to limit posterior collapse during sleep. These procedures include tongue-base suspension, genioglossal advancement, hyoid suspension, lingualplasty, and maxillomandibular advancement. We reviewed 269 patients undergoing to osas surgery at the ENT Department of Forlì Hospital in the last decade. Surgery was considered a success if the postoperative apnea/hypopnea index (AHI) was less than 20/h. According to the results, we have developed surgical decisional algorithms with the aims to optimize the success of these procedures by identifying proper candidates for surgery and the most appropriate surgical techniques. Although not without risks and not as predictable as positive airway pressure therapy, surgery remains an important treatment option for patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), particularly for those who have failed or cannot tolerate positive airway pressure therapy. Successful surgery depends on proper patient selection, proper procedure selection, and experience of the surgeon. The intended purpose of medical algorithms is to improve and standardize decisions made in the delivery of medical care, assist in standardizing selection and application of treatment regimens, to reduce potential introduction of errors. Nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (nCPAP) is the recommended therapy for patients with moderate to severe OSAS. Unfortunately this treatment is not accepted by some patient, appears to be poorly tolerated in a not neglible number of subjects, and the compliance may be critical, especially in the long term if correctly evaluated with interview as well with CPAP smart cards analysis. Among the alternative options in Literature, surgery is a long time honoured solution. However until now no clear scientific evidence exists that surgery can be considered a really effective option in OSAHS management. We have design a randomized prospective study comparing MMA and a ventilatory device (Autotitrating Positive Airways Pressure – APAP) in order to understand the real effectiveness of surgery in the management of moderate to severe OSAS. Fifty consecutive previously full informed patients suffering from severe OSAHS were enrolled and randomised into a conservative (APAP) or surgical (MMA) arm. Demographic, biometric, PSG and ESS profiles of the two group were statistically not significantly different. One year after surgery or continuous APAP treatment both groups showed a remarkable improvement of mean AHI and ESS; the degree of improvement was not statistically different. Provided the relatively small sample of studied subjects and the relatively short time of follow up, MMA proved to be in our adult and severe OSAHS patients group a valuable alternative therapeutical tool with a success rate not inferior to APAP.
Resumo:
Lung ultrasound use is increasing in respiratory medicine thanks to its development in the latest years. Actually it allows to study diseases of the chest wall (traumas, infections, neoplasms), diaphragm (paralysis, ipokinesis), pleura (effusions, pneumothorax, thickenings, neoplasms) and lung parenchyma (consolidations, interstitial syndromes, peripheral lesions). One of the most useful application of chest ultrasound is the evaluation of effusions. However, no standardized approach for ultrasound-guided thoracenthesis is available. Our study showed that our usual ultrasonographic landmark (“V-point”) could be a standard site to perform thoracenthesis: in 45 thoracenthesis no pneumothorax occurred, drainage was always successful at first attempt. Values of maximum thickness at V-point and drained fluid volume showed a significative correlation. Proteins concentration of ultrasound patterns of effusions (anechoic, ipoechoic, moving echoic spots, dense moving spots, hyperechoic) were compared to those of the macroscopic features of fluids showing connection between light-yellow fluid and echoic moving spots pattern and between ipoechoic/dense moving spots and cloudy-yellow/serum-haematic fluids. These observations suggest that ultrasound could predict chemical-physical features of effusions. Lung ultrasound provides useful information about many disease of the lung, but actually there is not useful in obstructive bronchial diseases. Analysing diaphragmatic kinetics using M-mode through transhepatic scan we described a similarity between diaphragm excursion during an expiratory forced maneuver and the volume/time curve of spirometry. This allowed us to identify the M-mode Index of Obstruction (MIO), an ultrasound-analogue of FEV1/VC. We observed MIO values of normal subjects (9) and obstructed patients (9) comparing the two groups. FEV1/VC and MIO showed a significant correlation suggesting that MIO may be affected by airways obstruction; MIO values were significatively different between normal and obstructed so that it could identify an obstructive syndrome. The data show that it is possible to suspect the presence of obstructive syndrome of the airways using ultrasonography of the diaphragm.
Resumo:
Asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are two distinct lung diseases with distinctive clinical and inflammatory features. A proportion of asthmatic patients experience a fixed airflow obstruction that persists despite optimal pharmacologic treatment for reasons that are still largely unknown. We found that patients with asthma and COPD sharing a similar fixed airflow obstruction have an increased lung function decline and frequency of exacerbations. Nevertheless, the decline in lung function is associated with specific features of the underlying inflammation. Airway inflammation increases during asthma exacerbation and disease severity. Less is known about the correlations between symptoms and airway inflammation in COPD patients. We found that there is no correlation between symptoms and lung function in COPD patients. Nevertheless symptoms changes are associated with specific inflammatory changes: cough is associated with an increase of sputum neutrophils in COPD, dyspnoea is associated with an increase of eosinophils. The mechanisms of this correlation remain unknown. Neutrophils inflammation is associated with bacterial colonization in stable COPD. Is not known whether inhaled corticosteroids might facilitate bacterial colonization in COPD patients. We found that the use of inhaled corticosteroids in COPD patients is associated with an increase of airway bacterial load and with an increase of airway pathogen detection. Bacterial and viral infections are the main causes of COPD and asthma exacerbations. Impaired innate immune responses to rhinovirus infections have been described in adult patients with atopic asthma. Whether this impaired immune condition is present early in life and whether is modulated by a concomitant atopic condition is currently unknown. We found that deficient innate immune responses to rhinovirus infection are already present early in life in atopic patients without asthma and in asthmatic subjects. These findings generalize the scenario of increased susceptibility to viral infections to other Th2 oriented conditions.
Resumo:
Moraxella catarrhalis (Mcat) represents a human pathogen implicated in debilitating diseases, such as Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). One of the hallmarks of COPD is the excessive neutrophil oxidative stress mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS). Mcat shows a higher innate level of resistance to exogenous oxidative stress compared to the co-infecting human airways pathogens such as non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) but the underlying mechanisms are currently not well defined. In this thesis, we demonstrated that, differently from NTHi, Mcat was able to directly interfere with ROS production and ROS-related responses such as neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) and autophagy in differentiated neutrophilic-like dHL-60 cells and primary cells. The underlying mechanisms were shown to be phagocytosis/opsonins-independent but contact-dependent, due to the engagement of the immunosuppressive receptors. Indeed, we identified that through OmpCD porin, Mcat was able to engage Siglec inhibitory receptors suppressing ROS generation by the host cells. Furthermore, Mcat provided a safer niche for the co-infecting NTHi bacterium which was otherwise susceptible to the host antimicrobial arsenal. Subsequently, to deeply characterize the Mcat global transcriptional response to oxidative stress, an RNA-Seq experiment was performed on exponentially growing bacteria exposed to sublethal amounts of H2O2 or CuSO4, stimuli that the pathogens experienced once they are phagocytosed. We unraveled a previously unidentified common transcriptional program following H2O2 and CuSO4 exposure, demonstrating a similar defense mechanism to the stress conditions encountered in neutrophils. We ascertained new crucial factors for this pathogen response and established a novel in vivo Mcat infection model, using the invertebrate Galleria mellonella. Actually, we observed that deletion mutants of genes implicated in oxidative stress resistance exhibited reduced virulence. In conclusion, this work represents an important step in the understanding of Mcat innate resistance mechanisms to oxidative stress and further elucidate the virulence mechanisms during infection.
Resumo:
Duodeno-gastroesophageal reflux aspiration is associated with chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD) and aspiration of bile acids (BA), functional molecules in the gastro-intestinal tract with emulsifying properties. While links between reflux aspiration to lung disease have been identified, the relevance of bile acid as molecular ligands and outcome predictors is poorly defined. We sought to determine and quantify the various BA species in airways of the lung transplant recipients to better understand the various effects of aspirated BA that contribute to post-transplantation outcomes and to investigate their molecular effects on airway function and contractility.
Resumo:
The tobacco epidemic is a public health burden. Nicotine-Delivery-Systems(NDS) are devices designed to help people replace conventional cigarette(CC) and among these devices we find electronic cigarettes(e-cig), which are classified as Electronic-NDS(ENDS). E-cigs use different technologies to vaporize a liquid or to heat the tobacco avoiding the combustion phenomenon(IQOS). The US Food and Drug Administration(FDA) has labelled IQOS as modified risk tobacco products(MRTPs), indirectly encouraging the perception of safety in the consumers, but IQOS smoke, although to a lesser extent than conventional, still presents a great deal of harmful or potentially harmful compounds. My PhD thesis aims to study the toxic effects related to IQOS exposure. I sought to answer the question of whether the toxic compounds released by IQOS, albeit in reduced concentrations, could lead to genotoxicity and damage to the airways and liver in vivo. At the University of Nottingham, I have investigated in vitro the effects generated by the IQOS, e-cigs and CC exposure on PBMCs and human lung epithelial cell line. Finally, at University of Milano–Bicocca, I have developed a in vivo Positron Emission computed Tomography(PET) imaging procedure meant to be applied to the monitoring of ENDS toxicity, particularly in the brain. These results indicate that IQOS is not a low-risk product in vivo, for primary target organs but also for secondary organs, although we have observed a small impact in vitro. Labelling as MRTP may mislead consumers who interpret “a lower level of toxic compounds” as an indication of “harmlessness” when there is a health risk for users. In the last part, I set up a methodology for studying temporal fluctuations of regional brain metabolism and connectivity derived from mice of different ages allowing researchers to obtain normative values in investigations of the efficacy or toxicity of substances at the functional level of the CNS.