Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149514 (bronchitis)
6,902 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The distribution of white cell subclasses in different lymphoid (bone marrow, spleen, and blood) and parenchymal (liver, skin, lungs, and gut) target organs was studied after bone marrow transplantation in the rat. BN rats were irradiated and transplanted with 60-80 X 10(6) Lew (allogeneic) or BN (syngeneic) bone marrow cells. The recovery of lymphocytes was somewhat elevated in the bone marrow and spleen, slightly decreased in the blood, and markedly higher in the liver and skin in the allograft compared with the syngeneic graft recipient. A mild lymphocytic bronchitis was present in the lungs of the allografted animal, and the gut was hypocellular throughout the observation period. The total recovery of different lymphocyte subclasses; pan T, T helper, T suppressor-killer, class-II-positive cells, and surface-Ig-positive B cells in the different lymphoid organs--i.e., bone marrow, spleen, and blood--was similar in allogeneic compared with syngeneic graft recipients. In the liver and skin, which are the major target organs of acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) in the rat, there was a massive infiltration of different T cell subclasses; high numbers of B cells were also seen in the liver. There was no difference in the T helper/T suppressor-killer ratio in the lymphoid organs or the liver of allograft compared with syngeneic graft recipients; in the skin and lungs the ratio was reduced more in the allograft compared with syngeneic graft recipient, whereas in the gut the situation was the opposite. These observations emphasize regional differences in the structure of inflammation in the different parenchymal target organs of aGVHD in the rat.
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation in the rat. V. Lymphoid cell subclasses in the target organs during acute graft-versus-host disease. 294 Jul 37

A randomised double-blind trial involving vitamin C/placebo supplementation was conducted on 57 elderly patients admitted to hospital with acute respiratory infections (bronchitis and bronchopneumonia). Patients were assessed clinically and biochemically on admission and again at 2 and 4 weeks after admission having received either 200 mg vitamin C per day, or placebo. This relatively modest oral dose led to a significant increase in plasma and white cell vitamin C concentration even in the presence of acute respiratory infection. Using a clinical scoring system based on major symptoms of the respiratory condition, patients supplemented with the vitamin fared significantly better than those on placebo. This was particularly the case for those commencing the trial most severely ill, many of whom had very low plasma and white cell vitamin C concentrations on admission. Various mechanisms by which vitamin C could assist this type of patient are discussed.
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PMID:The clinical effects of vitamin C supplementation in elderly hospitalised patients with acute respiratory infections. 781 37

Inhalation of cigarette smoke aerosol via active smoking is associated with the development of pulmonary inflammation. The cytotoxic potential of cigarette smoke has been hypothetically related to development of pulmonary inflammation since the release of intracellular contents from dead and dying cells has been reported to induce inflammatory foci. In this study, cigarette smoke condensates (CSCs) were prepared from Kentucky 1R4F reference cigarettes and cigarettes that primarily heat tobacco (Eclipse). The two CSCs were then compared for their ability to induce killing in human-hamster A(L) hybrid cells. CSCs prepared from Eclipse were much less cytotoxic than those prepared from reference cigarettes. At 60 microg CSC/ml culture medium, survival for CSC from Eclipse cigarettes was approximately 70% compared with 1% for CSC from burned K1R4F cigarettes. The observed reduction in CSC-Eclipse cytotoxicity toward these mammalian cells is consistent with the previously published observation of a 30% decline in pulmonary white cell count and 40% reduction in visual bronchitis index in human smokers who switched to Eclipse for 2 months. Results with N-acetylcysteine and buthionine-S-R-sulfoximine indicate that glutathione markedly reduces the cytoxicity of both CSCs.
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PMID:The role of glutathione in the toxicity of smoke condensates from cigarettes that burn or heat tobacco. 1139 Jan 85

An anti-tumour drug, 5-fluorouracil (5 FU) was used to deplete heterophils in 11-day-old white leghorn chickens. The reduction in heterophil numbers was monitored by total and differential white cell counts in the peripheral blood. Three days after injection of 5 FU, when the heterophil numbers were significantly reduced, chickens were infected with the Massachusetts strain of infectious bronchitis virus (IBV). Following infection, although the numbers of birds exhibiting clinical signs (nasal exudate) were significantly higher in the 5 FU treated group, the consistency of the nasal exudate was characteristically thin and watery. No significant differences were seen in the virus titres in trachea, lung and kidney between normal and heteropaenic chickens infected with IBV. However, the epithelial cell damage in the tracheal sections was less in the heterophil-depleted chickens.
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PMID:Effect of heterophil depletion by 5-fluorouracil on infectious bronchitis virus infection in chickens. 1848 18