Publications by authors named "A M Sustiel"

We have shown previously that neutrophils (PMNs) from patients with asthma have a more potent stimulated respiratory burst than normals and that their respiratory burst is significantly less suppressed with exposure to 2-chloroadenosine (2-CADO). The present studies investigated the basis of this defect in responsiveness to 2-CADO. PMNs obtained from asthmatics either not on theophylline (minus theophylline) or taking theophylline (plus theophylline) generated significantly more superoxide in response to 2 x 10(-8) M FMLP (2.

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Activation of neutrophils (PMN) within the airways results in the secretion of a number of products such as reduced oxygen metabolites that could contribute to the inflammatory response associated with asthma. However, mediators of allergy, such as histamine, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), isoproterenol, and adenosine, may serve to mitigate this inflammation through feedback inhibition of neutrophil function. To test the hypothesis that PMN activation and feedback inhibition mechanisms may be abnormal in asthmatics, we compared both superoxide production and adenosine-induced suppression of superoxide production in 12 matched pairs of asthmatics and control subjects.

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Although clinical responses to allergens have been shown to primarily involve IgE antibodies, there is often no clear correlation between the amount of allergen-specific IgE present in the serum and the nature and severity of allergic symptoms. This observation raises the question of the possible role of non-IgE mediated types of immune responses in this reaction. It is not known to what extent components of T cell-mediated immunity are involved in IgE-mediated reactions but several observations suggest an association between atopic disease and alterations in cellular immune function.

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