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Inflammation-induced preterm lung maturation: lessons from animal experimentation
Institution:1. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar;2. Qatar Biomedical Research Institute, Doha, Qatar;3. Department of Health Sciences, Qatar University, Doha, Qatar;4. Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Faculty of Medicine, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon
Abstract:Intrauterine inflammation, or chorioamnionitis, is a major contributor to preterm birth. Prematurity per se is associated with considerable morbidity and mortality resulting from lung immaturity but exposure to chorioamnionitis reduces the risk of neonatal respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) in preterm infants. Animal experiments have identified that an increase in pulmonary surfactant production by the preterm lungs likely underlies this decreased risk of RDS in infants exposed to chorioamnionitis. Further animal experimentation has shown that infectious or inflammatory agents in amniotic fluid exert their effects on lung development by direct effects within the developing respiratory tract, and probably not by systemic pathways. Differences in the effects of intrauterine inflammation and glucocorticoids demonstrate that canonical glucocorticoid-mediated lung maturation is not responsible for inflammation-induced changes in lung development. Animal experimentation is identifying alternative lung maturational pathways, and transgenic animals and cell culture techniques will allow identification of novel mechanisms of lung maturation that may lead to new treatments for the prevention of RDS.
Keywords:Inflammation  glucocorticoids  preterm  surfactant  prostaglandins  respiratory distress syndrome  bronchopulmonary dysplasia
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