Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although paraquat (PQ) is known to induce
pulmonary fibrosis
, how it does so is not entirely clear. To elucidate the mechanisms involved, the profile of gene expression in the lung at three months after exposure to PQ (7 mg/kg, s.c., daily for eight administrations) was investigated in rats using a DNA microarray. Changes in gene expression that were considered to reflect damage to the lung, a change in the balance of electrolytes and fluid, and alveolar remodeling were observed. The products of these genes were: CSF-1 receptor, which is a receptor of inflammatory cytokines that activates monocyte/macrophages; TGF-beta type II receptor, which is a receptor of TGF-betas involved in wound healing and fibrosis; a subunit of Na+/K(+)-ATPase, an amiloride-sensitive cation channel, and a subunit of the potassium channel, all of which regulate the alveolar fluid balance and play a role in clearing
lung edema
; the adenosine A2a receptor, which has a protective function in the lung and interacts with dopamine D1 and D2 receptors to regulate the function of amiloride-sensitive cation channels; cofilin, which is involved in the depolymerization and cleavage of actin filaments; LIM motif-containing protein kinase 1, which negatively regulates the activity of cofilin; SHPS-1, which regulates the integrin-mediated reorganization of the cytoskeleton; and sodium channel beta 2, which is involved in cell adhesion and migration. These results indicate that PQ-induced
pulmonary fibrosis
does not merely terminate as cicatrices three months after the discontinuation of PQ treatment, but that dynamic functional change continues in the lung.
...
PMID:DNA microarray analysis of pulmonary fibrosis three months after exposure to paraquat in rats. 1707 88
Leukotrienes are increased locally in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Furthermore, a role for these arachidonic acid metabolites has been thoroughly characterized in the animal bleomycin model of lung fibrosis by using different gene knock-out settings. We investigated the efficacy of pharmacological inhibition of leukotrienes activity in the development of bleomycin-induced lung injury by comparing the responses in wild-type mice with mice treated with zileuton, a 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor and MK-571, a cys-leukotrienes receptor antagonist. Mice were subjected to intra-tracheal administration of bleomycin or saline and were assigned to receive either MK-571 at 1 mg/Kg or zileuton at 50 mg/Kg daily. One week after bleomycin administration, BAL cell counts, lung histology with van Gieson for collagen staining and immunohistochemical analysis for myeloperoxidase, IL-1 and TNF-alpha were performed. Following bleomycin administration both MK-571 and zileuton treated mice exhibited a reduced degree of lung damage and inflammation when compared to WT mice as shown by the reduction of:(i) loss of body weight, (ii) mortality rate, (iii) lung infiltration by neutrophils (myeloperoxidase activity, BAL total and differential cell counts), (iv)
lung edema
, (v) histological evidence of lung injury and collagen deposition, (vi) lung myeloperoxidase, IL-1 and TNF-alpha staining. This is the first study showing that the pharmacological inhibition of leukotrienes activity attenuates bleomycin-induced lung injury in mice. Given our results as well as those coming from genetic studies, it might be considered meaningful to trial this drug class in the treatment of
pulmonary fibrosis
, a disease that still represents a major challenge to medical treatment.
...
PMID:Pharmacological inhibition of leukotrienes in an animal model of bleomycin-induced acute lung injury. 1711 1
Paraquat (PQ)-induced pulmonary toxicity is characterized by initial development of
pulmonary edema
, infiltration of inflammatory cells, and damage to the alveolar epithelium, which may progress to severe fibrosis. However, the exact role of PQ in the progression of the pathogenesis has not been clearly established. To understand the mechanism of PQ in pulmonary toxicity, we developed an animal model of PQ-induced lung injury by intranasal instillation of PQ solution using C57Black/6J mice. Twenty microliters of PQ solution (0.01, 0.01, and 0.04 mg/mouse) was applied through the nares, and the same amount of vehicle was applied in control mice. The pathological progression of lung pathology in our mouse model was very similar to that of patients suffering from PQ poisoning. The lungs of some animals exposed to PQ showed acute fulmination, resulting in death from 5 days post-exposure, but others showed a more protracted injury, resulting in typical
pulmonary fibrosis
at 3 weeks. Using this PQ-poisoned mouse model, we examined the gene expression at the initial destructive phase (within 5 days) that fibrosis has not completely developed. We prepared RNAs after 6h, 24h, and 5 days and examined the changes of the expression levels for 45 selected genes. The genes showing >2-fold increase at 6h or a time-dependent decrease during this experimental period may be the early markers for the destructive phase. These genes are Mt1, Mt2, Hmox1, Gcl, GR, IL-6, IL-13, Txn1, Fas, FasL, Lpin2, Mmp1a, Mmp12, Sfp-B, Sfp-D, CAT, EC-SOD, GST, and Pltp. On the other hand, the genes involved in the development of fibrosis, such as procollagen, Fn1, Eln, SMA, and Mmp9, Timp1 were significantly increased on day 5, not at 6h nor at 24h, after PQ treatment (the late marker). The genes showing a significant increase (Mmp3 and Mmp8) or decrease (VEGFA) at 24h and 5 days and not at 6h may be also the late markers. These changes in gene expression, which are equalled to functional activities of proteins, will be the targets for future studies focused on the development on PQ-induced pulmonary damage.
...
PMID:Mouse model of paraquat-poisoned lungs and its gene expression profile. 1721 68
The reported pluripotential capabilities of many human stem cell types has made them an attractive area of research, given the belief they may hold considerable therapeutic potential for treating a wide range of human diseases and injuries. Although the bulk of stem cell based research has focused on developing procedures for the treatment of pancreatic, neural, cardiovascular and haematopoietic diseases, the potential for deriving respiratory cell types from stem cells for treatment of respiratory specific diseases has also been explored. It is suggested that stem cell derivatives may be used for lung replacement/regeneration therapeutics and high though-put pharmacological screening strategies for a variety of respiratory injuries and diseases including: cystic fibrosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, respiratory distress syndrome,
pulmonary fibrosis
and
pulmonary edema
. This review will explore recent progress in characterizing adult respiratory and bone marrow derived stem cells with respiratory potential as well as the endogenous mechanisms directing the homing of these cells to the diseased and injured lung. In addition, the potential for embryonic stem cell based therapies in this domain as well as the histological, anatomical and molecular aspects of respiratory development will be summarized.
...
PMID:Deriving respiratory cell types from stem cells. 1822 Sep 3
IV heroin use is associated with several well-described complications, including noncardiogenic
pulmonary edema
, aspiration pneumonitis, ARDS, pneumonia, lung abscess, septic pulmonary emboli, and atelectasis. Foreign-body granulomatosis may develop when drug users inject solutions containing crushed oral tablets in which talc is used as filler and can be complicated by
pulmonary fibrosis
. The effects are distinct from
pulmonary edema
, which may occur acutely with heroin injection. We describe the case of a young female patient who was an IV heroin user who also smoked cigarettes, and presented with progressive dyspnea, hypoxia, and bilateral lung infiltrates. The final pathologic diagnosis in this case was one that had not been previously reported in IV heroin users.
...
PMID:A hitherto unreported pulmonary complication in an IV heroin user. 1825 22
Acute respiratory distress syndrome and acute lung injury for a part of a devastating syndrome characterized by acute onset, hypoxemia and bilateral infiltrates in the chest x-ray with absence of heart failure signs. Acute lung injury is the response of the lung to a local or systemic aggression, resulting in local inflammation and coagulation disorders, this leading to increased inflammatory
pulmonary edema
. Acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome are associated with increased procoagulant and reduced fibrinolytic activities mainly in alveoli and interstitial spaces in the lung. Fibrin deposits, which are the hallmark of early phase acute lung injury, stimulate fibroblast aggregation and collagen secretion, participating to the constitution of
pulmonary fibrosis
. The only clinical intervention found to have a significant impact on mortality in acute respiratory distress syndrome, despite the significant pro - gress in the understanding of the disease made over the past 10 years, is the use of low tidal volume ventilation. In severe sepsis, only recombinant human activated protein C administration has demonstrated a mortality reduction, together with faster improvement in respiratory dysfunction and shorter duration of mechanical ventilation. Future clinical trials should consider the potential benefit of anticoagulants administrated systemically or locally in the lungs to determine the role of anticoagulants in the treatment of acute pulmonary injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome.
...
PMID:[Role of coagulation in acute pulmonary lesion physiopathology. Parallelism with sepsis]. 1860 38
Flaxseed (FS) has high contents of omega-3 fatty acids and lignans with antioxidant properties. Its use in preventing thoracic X-ray radiation therapy (XRT)-induced pneumonopathy has never been evaluated. We evaluated FS supplementation given to mice given before and post-XRT. FS-derived lignans, known for their direct antioxidant properties, were evaluated in abrogating ROS generation in cultured endothelial cells following gamma radiation exposure. Mice were fed 10% FS or isocaloric control diet for three weeks and given 13.5 Gy thoracic XRT. Lungs were evaluated at 24 hours for markers of radiation-induced injury, three weeks for acute lung damage (lipid peroxidation,
lung edema
and inflammation), and at four months for late lung damage (inflammation and fibrosis). FS-Lignans blunted ROS generation in vitro, resulting from radiation in a dose-dependent manner. FS-fed mice had reduced expression of lung injury biomarkers (Bax, p21 and TGF-beta1) at 24 hours following XRT and reduced oxidative lung damage as measured by malondialdehyde (MDA) levels at 3 weeks following XRT. In addition, FS-fed mice had decreased lung fibrosis as determined by hydroxyproline content and decreased inflammatory cell influx into lungs at 4 months post XRT. Importantly, when Lewis lung carcinoma cells were injected systemically in mice, FS dietary supplementation did not appear to protect lung tumors from responding to thoracic XRT. Dietary FS is protective against
pulmonary fibrosis
, inflammation and oxidative lung damage in a murine model. Moreover, in this model, tumor radioprotection was not observed. FS lignans exhibited potent radiation-induced ROS scavenging action. Taken together, these data suggest that dietary flaxseed may be clinically useful as an agent to increase the therapeutic index of thoracic XRT by increasing the radiation tolerance of lung tissues.
...
PMID:Dietary flaxseed prevents radiation-induced oxidative lung damage, inflammation and fibrosis in a mouse model of thoracic radiation injury. 1898 22
In this study, we evaluated the protective effect and therapeutic potential of the prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) synthetic analog 16,16-dimethyl-PGE(2) (dmPGE(2)) in the animal model of
pulmonary fibrosis
induced by bleomycin. Mice subjected to intratracheal administration of bleomycin (1 mg/kg) received a dmPGE(2) dose of 30 microg/kg/day by continuous subcutaneous infusion. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL); immunohistochemical analysis for IL-1, TNF-alpha, and nitrotyrosine; measurement of fluid content in lung; myeloperoxidase activity assay; and lung histology were performed 1 week later. Lung histology and Sircol assay for collagen deposition were performed 3 weeks after treatments. Changes of body weight and survival rate were also evaluated at 1 and 3 weeks. Compared with bleomycin-treated mice, dmPGE(2) co-treated mice exhibited a reduced degree of body weight loss and mortality rate as well as of lung damage and inflammation, as shown by the significant reduction of: (1) lung infiltration by leukocytes; (2) myeloperoxidase activity; (3) IL-1, TNF-alpha, and nitrotyrosine immunostaining; (4)
lung edema
; and (5) histologic evidence of lung injury and collagen deposition. In a separate set of experiments, dmPGE(2) treatment was started 3 days after bleomycin administration, and the evaluation of lung damage and inflammation was assessed 4 days later. Importantly, delayed administration of dmPGE(2) also was able to protect from inflammation and lung injury induced by bleomycin. These results, indicating that dmPGE(2) is able to prevent and to reduce bleomycin-induced lung injury through its regulatory and anti-inflammatory properties, encourage further research to find new options for the treatment of
pulmonary fibrosis
.
...
PMID:16,16-Dimethyl prostaglandin E2 efficacy on prevention and protection from bleomycin-induced lung injury and fibrosis. 1905 88
Protease activated receptor 2 (PAR2) is widely-distributed (lung, liver, kidney, etc.) and expressed by variety of cells (i.e. leukocytes, epithelial cells, endothelial cells, and fibroblast). PAR2 may participate in many pathological processes, such as, inflammation, injury, as well as fibrosis. Therefore, in this study, we tested whether PAR2 would exert a role in acid-induced acute lung injury, E. coli pneumonia, bleomycin-induced acute lung injury and fibrosis. Acid, E. coli, or bleomycin were intratracheally instilled into the lungs of both wildtype and PAR2 knockout mice to detect differences in
pulmonary edema
, lung vascular permeability, lung fibrosis, and other parameters. Knockout of PAR2 did not affect the extent of
pulmonary edema
and lung vascular permeability in acid-induced acute lung injury. Also, both activation of PAR2 in the airspaces of the lung and deletion of PAR2 did not alter the magnitude of
pulmonary edema
and lung vascular permeability in E. coli pneumonia. Finally, PAR2 deficiency did not affect the severity of lung inflammation and lung fibrosis in bleomycin-induced acute lung injury and lung fibrosis models. Thus, PAR2 does not appear to play a critical role in the pathogeneses of experimental acid-induced acute lung injury, E. coli pneumonia, and bleomycin-induced acute lung injury and
pulmonary fibrosis
in mice.
...
PMID:Role of protease activated receptor 2 in experimental acute lung injury and lung fibrosis. 1922 16
Stem/progenitor cells can be used to repair defects in the airway wall, resulting from e.g., tumors, trauma, tissue reactions following long-time intubations, or diseases that are associated with epithelial damage. Several potential sources of cells for airway epithelium have been identified. These can be divided into two groups. The first group consists of endogenous progenitor cells present in the respiratory tract. This group can be subdivided according to location into (a) a ductal cell type in the submucosal glands of the proximal trachea, (b) basal cells in the intercartilaginous zones of the lower trachea and bronchi, (c) variant Clara cells (Clara v-cells) in the bronchioles and (d) at the junctions between the bronchioles and the alveolar ducts, and (e) alveolar type II cells. This classification of progenitor cell niches is, however, controversial. The second group consists of exogenous stem cells derived from other tissues in the body. This second group can be subdivided into: (a) embryonic stem (ES) cells, induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, or amniotic fluid stem cells, (b) side-population cells from bone marrow or epithelial stem cells present in bone marrow or circulation and (c) fat-derived mesenchymal cells. Airway epithelial cells can be co-cultured in a system that includes a basal lamina equivalent, extracellular factors from mesenchymal fibroblasts, and in an air-liquid interface system. Recently, spheroid-based culture systems have been developed. Several clinical applications have been suggested: cystic fibrosis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, chronic obstructive lung disease,
pulmonary fibrosis
,
pulmonary edema
, and pulmonary hypertension. Clinical applications so far are few, but include subglottic stenosis, tracheomalacia, bronchiomalacia, and emphysema.
...
PMID:Tissue engineering and the use of stem/progenitor cells for airway epithelium repair. 2057 96
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>