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Viral infections and atopy in asthma pathogenesis: New rationales for asthma prevention and treatment
Prospective birth cohort studies tracking asthma initiation and consolidation in community cohorts have identified viral infections occurring against a background of allergic sensitization to aeroallergens as a uniquely potent risk factor for the expression of acute severe asthma-like symptoms and for the ensuing development of asthma that can persist through childhood and into adulthood. A combination of recent experimental and human studies have suggested that underlying this bipartite process are a series of interactions between antiviral and atopic inflammatory pathways that are mediated by local activation of myeloid cell populations in the airway mucosa and the parallel programming and recruitment of their replacements from bone marrow. Targeting key components of these pathways at the appropriate stages of asthma provides new opportunities for the treatment of established asthma but, more crucially, for primary and secondary prevention of asthma during childhood. © 2012 Nature America, Inc. All rights reserved.
History
Journal
Nature MedicineVolume
18Pagination
726 - 735Publisher DOI
ISSN
1078-8956eISSN
1546-170XUsage metrics
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No categories selectedKeywords
Science & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyCell BiologyMedicine, Research & ExperimentalResearch & Experimental MedicineFC-EPSILON-RIRESPIRATORY SYNCYTIAL VIRUSPLASMACYTOID DENDRITIC CELLSHOUSE-DUST-MITEINNATE IMMUNE-RESPONSEMEMORY T-CELLSLUNG-FUNCTIONBONE-MARROWCHILDHOOD ASTHMAALLERGIC SENSITIZATION