© 2005 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & British Thoracic Society
EDITORIAL
Neutrophils and asthma
Is the neutrophil the key effector cell in severe asthma?
1 Department of Respiratory Medicine, Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, Norwich, UK
2 Institute of Lung Health, Glenfield Hospital, Leicester, UK
3 Respiratory Medicine Division, Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Addenbrookes and Papworth Hospitals, Cambridge, UK
Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Professor E R Chilvers
Respiratory Medicine Division, Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge CB2 2QQ, UK; erc24@cam.ac.uk
The importance of the neutrophil as the dominant inflammatory cell in many of the non-atopic and more severe phenotypes of asthma is now clear
Keywords: asthma; neutrophil; inflammation
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Eosinophilic inflammation has long been considered one of the most distinctive pathological hallmarks of asthma1 and features in many contemporary definitions of this disease. A plethora of studies published from the mid 1990s onwards have suggested, however, that airway eosinophilia is not a universal finding. This has fuelled debate that discrete pathological phenotypes of asthma may exist, with the neutrophilrather than the eosinophildominating in certain circumstances.24 We present data that support the current renewed interest in the neutrophil as a primary driver of airways inflammation, particularly in the most severe forms of asthma. There are also some intriguing data to suggest that, when the eosinophil has been "red carded" and disappears from the inflamed airway, the neutrophil may be drawn in and act as the substitute granulocyte.
The hypothesis that the eosinophil is the key effector cell involved in the pathogenesis of asthma has run into trouble
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