Mechanisms of Pulmonary Fibrosis

Victor J. Thannickal(University of Michigan), Galen B. Toews(University of Michigan), Eric S. White(University of Michigan), Joseph P. Lynch(University of Michigan), Fernando J. Martínez(University of Michigan)
Annual Review of Medicine
January 27, 2004
Cited by 822

Abstract

Tissue injury evokes highly conserved, tightly regulated inflammatory responses and less well-understood host repair responses. Both inflammation and repair involve the recruitment, activation, apoptosis, and eventual clearance of key effector cells. In this review, we propose the concept of pulmonary fibrosis as a dysregulated repair process that is perpetually "turned on" even though classical inflammatory pathways may be dampened or "switched off." Significant regional heterogeneity, with varied histopathological patterns of inflammation and fibrosis, has been observed in individual patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. We discuss environmental factors and host response factors, such as genetic susceptibility and age, that may influence these varied manifestations. Better understanding of the mechanisms of lung repair, which include alveolar reepithelialization, myofibroblast differentiation/activation, and apoptosis, should offer more effective therapeutic options for progressive pulmonary fibrosis.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis