AI Article Synopsis

  • The lungs function like a sponge in the body's circulatory system, crucial for oxygen intake and carbon dioxide removal, with a large surface area for gas exchange.
  • The immune system is vital for lung health due to constant environmental exposure, with deficiencies leading to increased risk for infections.
  • The review focuses on understanding fluid management in the lungs during injury and inflammation, highlighting the role of cytokines, ion channels, and the need for further research in this area.

Article Abstract

The lungs conceptually represent a sponge that is interposed in series in the bodies' systemic circulation to take up oxygen and eliminate carbon dioxide. As such, it matches the huge surface areas of the alveolar epithelium to the pulmonary blood capillaries. The lung's constant exposure to the exterior necessitates a competent immune system, as evidenced by the association of clinical immunodeficiencies with pulmonary infections. From the to the postnatal and adult situation, there is an inherent vital need to manage alveolar fluid reabsorption, be it postnatally, or in case of hydrostatic or permeability edema. Whereas a wealth of literature exists on the physiological basis of fluid and solute reabsorption by ion channels and water pores, only sparse knowledge is available so far on pathological situations, such as in microbial infection, acute lung injury or acute respiratory distress syndrome, and in the pulmonary reimplantation response in transplanted lungs. The aim of this review is to discuss alveolar liquid clearance in a selection of lung injury models, thereby especially focusing on cytokines and mediators that modulate ion channels. Inflammation is characterized by complex and probably time-dependent co-signaling, interactions between the involved cell types, as well as by cell demise and barrier dysfunction, which may not uniquely determine a clinical picture. This review, therefore, aims to give integrative thoughts and wants to foster the unraveling of unmet needs in future research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5758508PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.01644DOI Listing

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