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[Small airway: from definition to treatment].

Laura Gochicoa-RangelCarlos JiménezIrma Lechuga-TrejoRosaura Esperanza Benítez-PérezIreri Thirión-RomeroFederico Isaac Hernández-RochaCecilio O Ceballos-ZúñigaAngela Dayana Williams-JacquezSelene Guerrero-ZúñigaRoberto Díaz-GarcíaAloisia Paloma Hernández-MoralesJacqueline Lorena Aguilar-ZanelaLuis Torre-Bouscoulet
Published in: Revista alergia Mexico (Tecamachalco, Puebla, Mexico : 1993) (2023)
The small airway, present since the origins of humanity and described barely a century ago, has recently been discovered as the anatomical site where inflammation begins in some obstructive lung diseases, such as asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), per se. Small airway dysfuction was identified in up to 91% of asthmatic patients and in a large proportion of COPD patients. In subjects without pathology, small airway represent 98.8% (approximately 4500 ml) of the total lung volume, contributing only between 10-25% of the total lung resistance; however, in subjects with obstruction, it can represent up to 90% of the total resistance. Despite this, its morphological and functional characteristics allow its dysfunction to remain undetected by conventional diagnostic methods, such as spirometry. Hence the importance of this review, which offers an overview of the tools available to assess small airway dysfunction and the possible therapies that act in this silent zone.
Keyphrases
  • chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
  • lung function
  • end stage renal disease
  • newly diagnosed
  • oxidative stress
  • chronic kidney disease
  • ejection fraction
  • cystic fibrosis
  • air pollution
  • replacement therapy