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6792639
Bronchial Asthma
Description
bronchial asthma pathology profile
No tags specified
pathology
respiratory
asthma
pathology
Mind Map by
Farah Mansour
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Farah Mansour
about 8 years ago
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Resource summary
Bronchial Asthma
Episodic & reversible airway disease
Primarily targets the bronchi & its subdivisions & nonrespiratory bronchioles
Extrinsic Asthma
Pathogenesis
Type 1 HSR with exposure to extrinsic allergen
Initial sensitization to an inhaled allergen
Stimulate induction of CD4 TH2 >> release IL-4 & IL-5
IL4 stimulates isotype switching to IgE production
IL 5 stimulates production and activation of eosinophils
Inhaled Antigens cross link IgE antibodies on mast cells on mucosal surfaces
Release of histamine & other performed mediators
Function of Mediators : stimulate BRONCHOCONSTRICTION, Mucus Production, Influx of Leukocytes
Late phase reaction ( 4-8 h)
Eotaxin is produced
Chemotactic and activator for eosinophils
Eosinophils release major basic protein and cationic protein
Damage epithelial cells and produce airway constriction
Other mediators involved:
(1) Leukotrienes LTC-D-E4 causes prolonged bronchoconstriction.
(2) Acetylcholine causes airway muscle contraction.
Histologic Changes in Bronchi
(1) Thickening of the basement membrane
(2) Edema and a mixed inflammatory infiltrate
(3) Hypertrophy of submucosal glands
(4) Hypertrophy/hyperplasia of smooth muscle cells
Histologic Changes in Bronchioles
(1) Formation of spiral-shaped mucus plugs
(a) Contain shed epithelial cells called Curschmann spirals
(b) Pathologic effect of MBP and cationic protein
(2) Crystalline granules in eosinophils coalesce to form Charcot-Leyden crystals.
(3) Patchy loss of epithelial cells, goblet cell metaplasia
(4) Thick basement membrane
(5) Smooth muscle cell hypertrophy and hyperplasia
Clinical Findings
Episodic expiratory wheezing
Nocturnal cough
Increased anteroposterior diameter << air trapping & increased residual volume
Lab Findings:
Initially develop respiratory alkalosis; normal pH or respiratory acidosis indicates need for intubation
FEV1 is best measure of severity
Eosinophilia, positive skin tests for allergens
Intrinsic Asthma
Nonimmune
Causes
Virus induced respiratory infection ex. rhinovirus, parainfluenza, respiratory syncytial viruses
Air Pollutant
Aspirin or NSAID sensitivity
COX inhibition leaves lipoxygenase pathway open for productionn of leukotrienes
Stress, exercise, cigarette smoke
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