24 research outputs found
The role of respiratory viruses in the origin and exacerbations of asthma
Purpose of review
The present review focuses and comments on the increasing body of
evidence correlating respiratory viral infections with asthma onset and
exacerbations.
Recent findings
Recent data suggest multiple and some time contrasting roles for viral
infection in the origin of asthma. These data also indicate that the
immune status of the host, including atopy, may interactively contribute
to this process, conferring susceptibility or even resistance to the
development of asthma in virus-infected individuals. In the presence of
asthma, the role of viral infection in triggering exacerbations is
clearly established. Chemokine and cytokine responses of the respiratory
epithelium, a biased type 1/type 2 cytokine balance, defective
costimulation, as well as abnormal neural control have been suggested as
possible mechanisms. The importance of concurrent or synergistic effects
of allergen exposure is currently under scrutiny.
Summary
Viruses may initiate and certainly exacerbate asthma. Mild repeated
infections early in life could also stimulate type 1 immune responses
conferring protection from atopy and asthma. The host’s immune status,
the type of viral infection and the timing of exposure to various
environmental stimuli are probably the key factors in this process.
Mechanistic insights deduced from recent work should allow for the
development of intervening strategies in the near future