UVa Scientists Hot on Trail of Therapies for Deadly Lung FailureFebruary 22, 2006Researchers at the University of Virginia Health System have identified a molecular target, or receptor, for potential drugs to treat acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), a sudden and life-threatening failure of the lung. Interestingly, the receptor is in the same class that gives people their sense of sight, smell and taste (G-protein coupled receptors.) In ARDS, patients cannot breathe on their own because fluid gets into the lungs. Essentially, the body's immune system causes lung inflammation and accumulation of fluid in the air sacs, or alveoli, leading to low blood-oxygen levels. Up to 30 percent of patients in intensive care units can die from ARDS. There is no current therapy other than general life support and putting patients on a breathing machine. If they survive, many people face long-term lung problems. Common causes of ARDS are pneumonia, septic shock, trauma, or inhaling chemicals. The receptor identified by UVa doctors is called CXCR2. It's expressed on the endothelial cells that line the blood vessels of the lung and on inflammatory leukocytes. Using animal models, UVa doctors have found that CXCR2 attracts white blood cells called neutrophils into the lung, a key event in the early development of ARDS. CXCR2 has been characterized in the past, but the endothelial cell effects define a new role for this receptor in the body's physiology.
"We can't say yet that if you target this receptor you will stop ARDS," said Klaus Ley, M.D., Ph.D., director of the cardiovascular research center at UVa. "But it is reasonable to be hopeful and to pursue this type of research that might one day translate into clinical application." Ley is senior author on a paper describing the receptor CXCR2 in the Feb. 16, 2006 "Online First Articles" of The Journal of Clinical Investigation found on the web at www.jci.org. Dr. Jörg Reutershan, M.D., an anesthesiologist from Germany doing research in Ley's lab, discovered that CXCR2 expressed on endothelial cells is involved in acute respiratory syndrome. "Our finding is that expression of this receptor is in the lung itself," Reutershan said. "Our hope is that drug companies might be able to target the lung with an aerosol, which would have the advantage of hitting receptor without compromising the entire immune system, which is always a problem. Aerosol treatment would be a great advantage." The paper is titled "Critical role of endothelial CXCR2 in LPS-induced neutrophil migration into the lung." 10.1172/JCI27009 University of Virginia Health System | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Related Lung Failure Current Events and Lung Failure News Articles New strategies against bird flu The Spanish flu outbreak of 1918 killed between 30 and 50 million people. In the infected patients, the ultimate cause of death was acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Deficiency in the protein MBL2 linked to increased cystic fibrosis severity Cystic fibrosis (CF), a hereditary disorder causing thick mucous production and frequent lung infections, is associated with a high mortality rate primarily due to lung failure. Key to out-of-control immune response in lung injury found Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine have discovered how a protein modulates the inflammatory response in sudden, life-threatening lung failure. The protein's previously unknown role is reported in the August issue of Nature Medicine. Blood marker helps predict prognosis among those with abdominal infection Monitoring blood levels of a compound known as procalcitonin in patients with peritonitis (a serious intra-abdominal infection) could help identify patients at increased risk of organ failure and death. Mouse study reveals new clues about virulence of 1918 influenza virus The first comprehensive analysis of an animal's immune response to the 1918 influenza virus provides new insights into the killer flu, report federally supported scientists in an article appearing online today in the journal Nature. Patients with history of cancer at increased risk for acquiring and dying from sepsis Hospitalized patients with a history of cancer are at a ten-fold increased risk of acquiring and subsequently dying from sepsis— a severe immune response to an infection—compared to hospitalized patients without cancer. Survival of patients with lung failure depends on health of other organs Doctors treating lung failure need to focus on the whole patient to improve the chance of patient survival. Research published on 9th July in Critical Care shows that the survival rate of patients admitted to hospital with lung failure alone is good, but diminishes if other vital organs fail. Hans Flaatten and colleagues carried out the 30-month study on intensive care unit (ICU) patients at the Haukeland University Hospital, Norway. They followed 529 patients diagnosed with acute respiratory failure (ARF) and measured their outcome in relation to the presence or absence of failure of other vital organs. They found that the mortality rate of patients with ARF alone was surprisingly low, but POSSIBLE EXPLANATION FOR FEVER AFTER PLATELET TRANSFUSION A preliminary study published in this week's issue of THE LANCET suggests a possible explanation for the biological process responsible for inducing fever and related symptoms after the transfusion of blood platelets. Millions of platelet transfusions are done every year, and febrile (fever) reactions occur in around a third of cases. Most reactions are mild, but occasionally life-threatening lung failure can occur. Richard Phipps and colleagues from the University of Rochester, USA, proposed that febrile responses in patients receiving platelets could be due to the release of CD40 ligand, a protein in the platelets that interacts with a receptor and is thought to be associated with the p More Lung Failure Current Events and Lung Failure News Articles |
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