Trachea and bronchi have ciliated epithelial cells, goblet cells, submucosal glands
- number distribution throughout airways?
- functions?
- issue?
Bronchioles: Club Cell
- what is it?
- function?
Causes of Airway Injury
Viruses that cause airway injury
& predispose to bacterial pneumonia
- cattle and sheep
Viruses that cause airway injury
& predispose to bacterial pneumonia
- swine
Viruses that cause airway injury
& predispose to bacterial pneumonia
- horse
Viruses that cause airway injury
& predispose to bacterial pneumonia
- dogs
Viruses that cause airway injury
& predispose to bacterial pneumonia
- cats
Non-infectious inflammation of
small airways
Acute effects of airway disease
Airway Injury: Effects on Lung Function
Airway Injury: Bronchitis, Bronchiolitis and Bronchiolar Necrosis
- sequelae
– Repair
– Bronchiolitis fibrosa obliterans
– Chronic bronchiolitis: metaplasia, neoplasia
Repair of Bronchiolar Injury
What if healing is delayed by extensive damage, or ongoing necrosis?
Bronchiolitis fibrosa obliterans
Obliterative bronchiolitis
- what is this?
Sequelae to Chronic Irritation, Inflammation, or Necrosis of the Airways
Ciliated epithelium is sensitive to injury
* Mucous metaplasia: protective adaptation
* Squamous metaplasia: protective adaptation
* Neoplastic transformation
Airway Injury:
Bronchitis, Bronchiolitis and Bronchiolar Necrosis
- cause
- acute effects
- sequelae
Causes:
* Viruses
* Chronic irritants
* Allergic
* Toxic
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Acute effects:
* Failure of mucociliary clearance
* Obstruction to airflow by exudate, edema, and bronchoconstriction
* Failure of alveolar ventilation…
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Sequelae:
* Repair
* Bronchiolitis obliterans
* Mucous or squamous metaplasia
* Neoplastic transformation
type 1 vs 2 pneumocytes
Type I Pneumocytes
* Gas exchange
* Susceptible to injury
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Type II Pneumocytes
* Stem cell for regeneration
* Production of surfactant lipid & protein
* Metabolism and detoxification
Blood-air interface:
- components
- functions
*Type I pneumocyte
*Basement membrane
*Endothelium
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*Critical for efficient gas exchange, esp O2
*Effects on compliance
Causes of Interstitial Lung Disease
Injury to Alveolar Epithelium or Endothelium
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* Viruses often injure alveolar and bronchiolar epithelium (bronchointerstitial pneumonia)
* Sepsis & SIRS: damage to endothelium
* Toxic agents
> Direct-acting toxins: chlorine gas, ammonia, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide (silos)
> Toxins which are converted by type II pneumocytes to reactive intermediates: 3-methylindole, paraquat
* Idiopathic
The Evolution of Interstitial Lung Injury
- acute and chronic
Resembles Normal Wound Healing
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* Acute
> Edema & hyaline membranes: fibrin and necrotic debris, due to alveolar epithelial injury
Determinants of pulmonary fibrosis?
Following an acute one-time injury, type II pneumocytes eventually differentiate into type I pneumocytes, and lung function returns to normal. In less favorable circumstances, type II pneumocytes persist and interstitial fibrosis may develop.
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The balance between epithelial repair (optimal) and repair by fibrosis (a permanent barrier to gas exchange) depends on persistence of the stimulus and extent of injury (and perhaps also the adequacy of the repair process). Chronic persistent stimuli (such as ongoing exposure to irritant chemicals, persistent virus infections, dusts particles, or hypersensitivity) are more likely to cause fibrosis than one-time insults (such as viral infection). Similarly, chronic inflammatory responses may heal by fibrosis. Finally, with severe damage, fibrosis may develop before the tissue has time to heal.
Alveolar Injury: Effects on Lung Function
Bronchointerstitial Pneumonia
- definition
- cause
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome and Acute Interstitial Lung Injury
- definition
- lesions
- causes, in dogs