Novel CT scan suggests possible lung destruction in some asthma patients: Study
Japan: A novel computer tomography (CT)-based approach revealed significant changes in a parameter that indicates lung destruction in some asthma patients, according to a recent study.
The findings of the study, published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, could lead to more personalized treatments for asthma accompanied by persistent airflow limitation.
The study found that asthmatics with fixed airflow obstruction (FAO) regardless of smoking status and asthma severity, showed parenchymal destruction which was associated with an accelerated decline in FEV1. This suggests the involvement of both airway and parenchyma in the pathophysiology of a subgroup of asthma.
Clinicians have long thought that some people with asthma experience declines in their lung function, called fixed airflow obstruction (FAO), due to changes to their airways. Now, scientists at Hokkaido University and colleagues have found that the issue in these people could extend to the surrounding lung tissue.
"Bronchial asthma is considered to be mainly due to inflammation and remodeling of the larger respiratory airways," explains respirologist Kaoruko Shimizu of Hokkaido University. "But not all asthmatics improve with the typical treatments prescribed to alleviate this condition. We wanted to know if changes to the surrounding lung tissue induced a decline in pulmonary function over time in this subgroup of patients," she explains.
DOI: https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0091674921013026
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