Webley Wilmore C, Hahn David L
University of Massachusetts Amherst, 240 Thatcher Rd. Life Science Laboratory Building N229, Amherst, MA, 01003, USA.
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, 1100 Delaplaine Court, Madison, WI, 53715, USA.
Respir Res. 2017 May 19;18(1):98. doi: 10.1186/s12931-017-0584-z.
Asthma is a chronic respiratory disease characterized by reversible airway obstruction and airway hyperresponsiveness to non-specific bronchoconstriction agonists as the primary underlying pathophysiology. The worldwide incidence of asthma has increased dramatically in the last 40 years. According to World Health Organization (WHO) estimates, over 300 million children and adults worldwide currently suffer from this incurable disease and 255,000 die from the disease each year. It is now well accepted that asthma is a heterogeneous syndrome and many clinical subtypes have been described. Viral infections such as respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and human rhinovirus (hRV) have been implicated in asthma exacerbation in children because of their ability to cause severe airway inflammation and wheezing. Infections with atypical bacteria also appear to play a role in the induction and exacerbation of asthma in both children and adults. Recent studies confirm the existence of an infectious asthma etiology mediated by Chlamydia pneumoniae (CP) and possibly by other viral, bacterial and fungal microbes. It is also likely that early-life infections with microbes such as CP could lead to alterations in the lung microbiome that significantly affect asthma risk and treatment outcomes. These infectious microbes may exacerbate the symptoms of established chronic asthma and may even contribute to the initial development of the clinical onset of the disease. It is now becoming more widely accepted that patterns of airway inflammation differ based on the trigger responsible for asthma initiation and exacerbation. Therefore, a better understanding of asthma subtypes is now being explored more aggressively, not only to decipher pathophysiologic mechanisms but also to select treatment and guide prognoses. This review will explore infection-mediated asthma with special emphasis on the protean manifestations of CP lung infection, clinical characteristics of infection-mediated asthma, mechanisms involved and antibiotic treatment outcomes.
哮喘是一种慢性呼吸道疾病,其主要潜在病理生理学特征为可逆性气道阻塞和气道对非特异性支气管收缩激动剂的高反应性。在过去40年中,全球哮喘发病率急剧上升。根据世界卫生组织(WHO)的估计,目前全球有超过3亿儿童和成人患有这种无法治愈的疾病,每年有25.5万人死于该疾病。现在人们普遍认为哮喘是一种异质性综合征,并且已经描述了许多临床亚型。呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)和人鼻病毒(hRV)等病毒感染因其能够引起严重的气道炎症和喘息而与儿童哮喘加重有关。非典型细菌感染似乎在儿童和成人哮喘的诱发和加重中也起作用。最近的研究证实存在由肺炎衣原体(CP)介导的,可能还有其他病毒、细菌和真菌微生物介导的感染性哮喘病因。早年感染如CP等微生物也可能导致肺部微生物群的改变,从而显著影响哮喘风险和治疗结果。这些感染性微生物可能会加重已确诊的慢性哮喘症状,甚至可能促成该疾病临床发病的初始发展。现在越来越广泛地认识到,基于引发哮喘发作和加重的诱因不同,气道炎症模式也有所不同。因此,目前正在更积极地探索对哮喘亚型的更好理解,不仅是为了解析病理生理机制,也是为了选择治疗方法和指导预后。本综述将探讨感染介导的哮喘,特别强调CP肺部感染的多种表现、感染介导的哮喘的临床特征、相关机制及抗生素治疗结果。