Thorax
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Multicenter Study
Parental smoking in childhood and adult obstructive lung disease: results from the European Community Respiratory Health Survey.
Early exposure to parental smoking appears to influence the development of the airways and predispose to respiratory symptoms. A study was undertaken to determine whether the consequences of parental smoking could be traced in adulthood. ⋯ Both intrauterine and environmental exposure to parental tobacco smoking was related to more respiratory symptoms and poorer lung function in adulthood in this multicultural study. The age window of particular vulnerability appeared to differ by sex, postnatal exposure being important only in men and a role for prenatal exposure being more evident in women.
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In patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) neutrophils are recruited in excess to the airways yet pathogens are not cleared and the patients suffer from chronic infections. Recent studies have shown a deficiency in airway fluids from patients with CF and other inflammatory pulmonary conditions of surfactant protein A (SP-A), a pattern recognition molecule that facilitates uptake of microbes by macrophages and neutrophils. ⋯ The findings strongly suggest that the neutrophil serine proteases cathepsin G and/or elastase and/or proteinase-3 contribute to degradation of SP-A and thereby diminish innate pulmonary antimicrobial defence.