Respiratory failure occurs more frequently after thoracic surgery than abdominal surgery. Although the etiology for this complication is frequently attributed to underlying lung disease present in patients undergoing thoracic surgery, this notion is often unfounded because many patients with normal preoperative pulmonary function often require prolonged oxygen supplementation even after minimal resection of lung tissue. Using a murine model of pulmonary resection and peripheral blood samples from patients undergoing resection of the lung or abdominal organs, we demonstrated that lung surgery initiates a proinflammatory loop that results in damage to the remaining lung tissue, noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, hypoxia, and even death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterleukin (IL)-33 has been shown to centrally regulate, among other processes, inflammation and fibrosis. Both intracellular full-length (FLIL33) precursor and extracellular mature cytokine (MIL33) forms exert such regulation, albeit differentially. Drug development efforts to target the IL-33 pathway have focused mostly on MIL33 and its specific cell-surface receptor, ST2, with limited attempts to negotiate the pathophysiological contributions from FLIL33.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The CC chemokine ligand 18 (CCL18) is a chemokine highly expressed in chronic inflammation in humans. Recent observations of elevated CCL18 plasma levels in patients with acute cardiovascular syndromes prompted an investigation into the role of CCL18 in the pathogenesis of human and mouse atherosclerosis.
Methods And Results: CCL18 was profoundly upregulated in ruptured human atherosclerotic plaque, particularly within macrophages.