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Eosinophil Progenitors in Airway Diseases Clinical...
Journal article

Eosinophil Progenitors in Airway Diseases Clinical Implications

Abstract

Asthma, allergic rhinitis, nasal polyposis, chronic rhinosinusitis, and related forms of upper and lower airway diseases are often characterized by eosinophilic and basophilic inflammation, involving systemic processes. Eosinophil/basophil (Eo/B) lineage-committed progenitor cells in cord blood, peripheral blood, bone marrow, lung tissue, and sputum are up-regulated in the above conditions, and respond to allergen and other stimuli with increased differentiative and migratory capacity. A considerable body of evidence now exists showing that activation of such Eo/B-selective hemopoietic processes is not only associated with the onset and maintenance of allergic inflammation in atopic adults, but also with the development of the allergic diathesis. Moreover, eosinophilopoietic processes within hemopoietic compartments and, importantly, at mucosal tissue sites during an allergic inflammatory response provide novel targets for the treatment of allergy as a systemic process and disease.

Authors

Denburg JA; Keith PK

Journal

Chest, Vol. 134, No. 5, pp. 1037–1043

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2008

DOI

10.1378/chest.08-0485

ISSN

0012-3692

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