Respirology : official journal of the Asian Pacific Society of Respirology
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Acute lung injury (ALI) is characterized by disruption of lung epithelial and endothelial cells, leading to increased membrane permeability and loss of barrier function. Claudins are key components of tight junctions (TJ) that regulate paracellular permeability, and play an important role in alveolar epithelial barrier function and fluid clearance. However, whether claudin-3, -4, -18 or -5 expression changes in Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA)-induced ALI and the clinical significance of such change is unknown. ⋯ Claudin-3, -4 and -18 released into the alveolar compartment is highly associated with barrier function loss caused by alveolar epithelial injury.
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The high prevalence of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) and increasing awareness of its potential health consequences has placed significant pressure on laboratory-based sleep services leading to growing waiting lists and delays in diagnosis and treatment. Consequently, there has been increasing interest in the use of simplified, ambulatory models of care involving clinical prediction tools, portable sleep monitoring and home autotitrating continuous positive airway pressure. ⋯ Recent randomized, controlled studies evaluating the clinical effectiveness of ambulatory management strategies versus traditional laboratory-based care for patients with OSA have consistently demonstrated that comparable patient outcomes can be achieved. The cost-effectiveness of these strategies is currently being debated, and further research examining the long-term economic implications of ambulatory models of care is needed.
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Transbronchial lung biopsies remain the gold standard to establish the presence of allograft rejection or infection after lung transplantation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of cryo-transbronchial biopsies (cryo-TBB) in lung transplantation patients. ⋯ Cryo-TBB for both surveillance and clinically indicated bronchoscopy in lung transplantation patients provides larger and more diagnostic lung parenchyma specimens with low complication rate and shorter intervention time than traditional forceps biopsies.
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Recognition of the potential of stem cell-based therapies for alleviating intractable lung diseases has provided the impetus for research aimed at identifying regenerative cells in the adult lung, understanding how they are organized and regulated, and how they could be harnessed in lung regenerative medicine. In this review, we describe the attributes of adult stem and progenitor cells in adult organs and how they are regulated by the permissive or restrictive microenvironment in which they reside. We describe the power and limitations of experimental models, cell separative strategies and functional assays used to model the organization and regulation of adult airway and alveolar stem cells in the adult lung. The review summarizes recent progress and obstacles in defining endogenous lung epithelial stem and progenitor cells in mouse models and in translational studies.