scholarly journals Local Defence System in Healthy Lungs

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 728-746
Author(s):  
Elizabeta Lohova ◽  
Zane Vitenberga-Verza ◽  
Dzintra Kazoka ◽  
Mara Pilmane

Background: The respiratory system is one of the main entrance gates for infection. The aim of this work was to compare the appearance of specific mucosal pro-inflammatory and common anti-microbial defence factors in healthy lung tissue, from an ontogenetic point of view. Materials and methods: Healthy lung tissues were collected from 15 patients (three females and 12 males) in the age range from 18 to 86. Immunohistochemistry to human β defensin 2 (HBD-2), human β defensin 3 (HBD-3), human β defensin 4 (HBD-4), cathelicidine (LL-37) and interleukine 17A (IL-17A) were performed. Results: The lung tissue material contained bronchial and lung parenchyma material in which no histological changes, connected with the inflammatory process, were detected. During the study, various statistically significant differences were detected in immunoreactive expression between different factors in all lung tissue structures. Conclusion: All healthy lung structures, but especially the cartilage, alveolar epithelium and the alveolar macrophages, are the main locations for the baseline synthesis of antimicrobial proteins and IL-17A. Cartilage shows high functional plasticity of this structure, including significant antimicrobial activity and participation in local lung protection response. Interrelated changes between antimicrobial proteins in different tissue confirm baseline synergistical cooperation of all these factors in healthy lung host defence.

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Arregui ◽  
Hillary Lane Glandon ◽  
Yara Bernaldo de Quirós ◽  
Idaira Felipe-Jiménez ◽  
Francesco Consoli ◽  
...  

Abstract Lipids are biomolecules present in all living organisms that, apart from their physiological functions, can be involved in different pathologies. One of these pathologies is fat embolism, which has been described histologically in the lung of cetaceans in association with ship strikes and with gas and fat embolic syndrome. To assess pathological lung lipid composition, previous knowledge of healthy lung tissue lipid composition is essential; however, these studies are extremely scarce in cetaceans. In the present study we aimed first, to characterize the lipids ordinarily present in the lung tissue of seven cetacean species; and second, to better understand the etiopathogenesis of fat embolism by comparing the lipid composition of lungs positive for fat emboli, and those negative for emboli in Physeter macrocephalus and Ziphius cavirostris (two species in which fat emboli have been described). Results showed that lipid content and lipid classes did not differ among species or diving profiles. In contrast, fatty acid composition was significantly different between species, with C16:0 and C18:1ω9 explaining most of the differences. This baseline knowledge of healthy lung tissue lipid composition will be extremely useful in future studies assessing lung pathologies involving lipids. Concerning fat embolism, non-significant differences could be established between lipid content, lipid classes, and fatty acid composition. However, an unidentified peak was only found in the chromatogram for the two struck whales and merits further investigation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 135-137
Author(s):  
G. I. Chepurnoy ◽  
V. B. Katsupeev ◽  
Mikhail G. Chepurnoy ◽  
R. L. Karagezyan ◽  
A. V. Leyga ◽  
...  

There is presented the analysis of 13 patients with polycystic lung disease. In the diagnosis of the disease, spiral computed tomography has a decisive importance. The technique of performing surgical interventions aimed at maximum preservation of healthy lung tissue is described in detail. The excision of cystic membranes and reliable suturing of bronchial fistulas determines the radicality of surgical interventions that provided favorable outcomes in the long term after operations in all patients.


2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 807-810
Author(s):  
Areg Noshadi ◽  
Michael Kircher ◽  
Stefan Pollnow ◽  
Gunnar Elke ◽  
Inéz Frerichs ◽  
...  

AbstractLung ventilation and perfusion analyses using chest imaging methods require a correct segmentation of the lung to offer anatomical landmarks for the physiological data. An automatic segmentation approach simplifies and accelerates the analysis. However, the segmentation of the lungs has shown to be difficult if collapsed areas are present that tend to share similar gray values with surrounding non-pulmonary tissue. Our goal was to develop an automatic segmentation algorithm that is able to approximate dorsal lung boundaries even if alveolar collapse is present in the dependent lung areas adjacent to the pleura. Computed tomography data acquired in five supine pigs with injured lungs were used for this purpose. First, healthy lung tissue was segmented using a standard 3D region growing algorithm. Further, the bones in the chest wall surrounding the lungs were segmented to find the contact points of ribs and pleura. Artificial boundaries of the dorsal lung were set by spline interpolation through these contact points. Segmentation masks of the entire lung including the collapsed regions were created by combining the splines with the segmentation masks of the healthy lung tissue through multiple morphological operations. The automatically segmented images were then evaluated by comparing them to manual segmentations and determining the Dice similarity coefficients (DSC) as a similarity measure. The developed method was able to accurately segment the lungs including the collapsed regions (DSCs over 0.96).


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexa Pragman ◽  
Richard Haupert ◽  
Brian Sandri ◽  
Trevor Gould ◽  
Andrew Limper ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 153 (15-16) ◽  
pp. 342-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Tomaselli ◽  
Alfred Maier ◽  
Freyja-Maria Smolle-Jüttner

Author(s):  
Andreas Kirschbaum ◽  
Andrijana Ivanovic ◽  
Thomas Wiesmann ◽  
Nikolas Mirow ◽  
Christian Meyer

AbstractIf a pulmonary pathology can be removed by anatomical segmentectomy, the need for lobectomy is obviated. The procedure is considered oncologically equivalent and saves healthy lung tissue. In every segmentectomy, lung parenchyma must be transected in the intersegmental plane. Using an ex vivo model based on porcine lung, three transection techniques (monopolar cutter + suture, stapler, and Nd:YAG laser) are to be compared with respect to their initial airtightness. At an inspiratory ventilation pressure of 25 mbar, all three preparations were airtight. Upon further increase in ventilation pressure up to 40 mbar, the laser group performed best in terms of airtightness. Since thanks to its use of a laser fibre, this technique is particularly suitable for minimally invasive surgery; it should be further evaluated clinically for this indication in the future.


1931 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 96-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Haynes

The following dusts produce a fibrosis in the guinea-pig's lung, and are therefore to be classed as dusts whose inhalation in industry would be attended by risks of pneumoconiosis. The most deadly of all dusts examined was precipitated silica. Less dangerous, but all producing fibrosis, were the following, arranged in order of decreasing toxicity: flint, slate, aluminium hydroxide, precipitated chalk, magnesium carbonate and carborundum. In the concentrations used in the experiments calcspar and emery were border-line dusts, indicating that their inhalation in any considerable quantity would cause fibrosis. Wood charcoal inhaled in large amount produces a slight fibrosis, and must, therefore, be placed on the “dangerous” list. Colloidal coal, when inhaled in massive amounts, is potentially dangerous, while shale under similar conditions is rather more dangerous.Haematite, talc, and molecular mixtures of soluble silica with aluminium hydroxide and magnesium carbonate respectively were not found to cause any permanent lesions in the lung.The deductions to be drawn from this work are:1. All inhaled particles are rapidly ingested by certain individual cells belonging to the alveolar epithelium.2. These cells (dust cells or phagocytes) remain in the lung parenchyma until they have ingested an amount of dust constituting the cell's saturation load. This load varies with different dusts.3. A cell having attained its saturation load becomes sooner or later detached from the alveolar wall and either migrates into the lymphatics or becomes free in the alveolus. In the former case it passes into the pulmonary lymphoid tissue and thence to the bronchial lymph glands. In the latter case it passes up the bronchial tree to be either coughed out or swallowed.4. Dust cells which speedily leave the alveolar wall are principally eliminated by the bronchi.5. In the case of a dust cell being eliminated from the lung via the lymphatics, it may be arrested in the periatrial lymphatics on account of its bulk. The dam thus produced offers obstruction to the passage of other dust cells shed into the alveoli. Groups of free dust cells in the obstructed alveoli form plaques, which degenerate and liberate their dust. This is again ingested, and the irritation caused by such a process may lead to fibrosis.6. The continued presence of dust-laden cells in the lymphatics may set up a foreign body irritation, with resulting fibrosis.7. Most inhaled particles contain soluble matter to at least a very small extent. The solute may be either harmlessly active or toxic. If the former, the cell is stimulated to detach itself from the alveolar wall, and so remove the dust. If the latter, the solute effects the viability of the phagocyte, which becomes less able to detach itself. At the same time the solute diffuses into the neighbouring tissues, with irritation to them, and consequent fibrosis.8. The more soluble form of a substance causes greater pulmonary damage than the less soluble. The solute, therefore, plays a large part in the determination of damage.9. While many dusts cause pulmonary fibrosis, silica is the dust par excellence predisposing to tuberculosis. This is doubtless due to its influence in forming a medium suitable not only for the survival but the proliferation of the tubercle bacillus in the lung (Kettle, private communication). The harmful effects of soluble silica may be neutralised by simultaneous administration of basic dusts such as aluminium hydroxide or magnesium carbonate, though the latter are themselves harmful when inhaled alone. It is suggested that their respective solutes combine to form monosilicate. Monosilicates do not appear to have any harmful effect on the lung.10. Heavy inhalations of any dust are liable to cause pulmonary damage.11. The intensity of the initial pulmonary reaction to a dust is very generally in inverse ratio to the degree of eventual damage caused by the dust.


2008 ◽  
pp. 75-80
Author(s):  
Ya. N. Shoikhet ◽  
A. V. Lepilov ◽  
Yu. G. Motin ◽  
A. P. Bochkarev

Purulent and destructive lung diseases are often complicated by loss of anatomic structure of lung tissue, development of lung cirrhosis with subsequent respiratory and heart failure. We performed pathomorphological examination of operational and post mortem lung tissue specimens from 116 inpatients of 25 to 78 years of age with acute lung abscess or lung gangrene who was treated at a pulmonology center from 1999 to 2005. Acute lung inflammation tending to suppuration was characterized by pronounced cell reaction with no "fibrin blockage" and resulted in extended histolysis and abscess formation. "Young" fibrin was often found. Microvessels were fully passable, full-blooded with no fibrin into lumen. At subacute stage, fibrin was "maturing" with subsequent organization and growth of granulated tissue. Clinically, there were sequestered lung abscesses. Massive deposits of "young" and "maturing" fibrin formed "fibrin cocoon" with macrophages and neutrophils bricked up inside. Cell reaction was weak. There were swelling and desquamation of endothelium of microvessels, massive fibrin deposits into vessel lumen and prominent perivascular impregnation with fibrin. This pathological variant could lead to formation of abscess or pulmonary fibrosis with carnification. In cases of massive subtotal or total, often bilateral lung injury with weak delimiting of purulent and destructive process massive destructive zones with resting lung parenchyma faintly impregnated with fibrin were seen. There were no features of fibrin deposition inside microvessels. Functional activity of neutrophils and macrophages was greatly decreased. Therefore, the most favourable pathohistological variant appears to be formation of fibrin blockage consisted of "young" fibrin deposits; prominent cell reaction and absence of microcirculatory block. Structural changes of cells and stroma should be considered during pathological examination in order to provide optimal treatment strategy.


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