Management of Inflammation in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease-Update.
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Date
2013-01
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Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a systemic inflammatory condition, the earliest manifestation of
which is airway obstruction which is only partially reversible and the treatment rationales are provided accordingly.
Research has shown that COPD-inflammation involves multiple inflammatory cells and mediators and the underlying
pathology differs from asthma inflammation.For these reasons, therapeutic agents that are effective in asthma patients
may not be optimal in COPD patients. COPD exacerbations are intensified inflammatory events compared with stable
COPD. The clinical and systemic consequences believed to result from the chronic inflammation observed in COPD,
suggest that inflammation intensity is a key factor in COPD and exacerbation severity and frequency. Although
inhaled corticosteroids are commonly used and are essential in asthma management, their efficacy in COPD is
limited, with only a modest effect at reducing exacerbations. The importance of inflammation in COPD needs to be
better understood by clinicians, and the differences in inflammation in COPD versus asthma should be considered
carefully to optimize the use of anti-inflammatory agents. Current COPD management focuses predominantly on
symptom relief by optimizing bronchodilatation. The role of phosphodiesterase type 4 inhibitors (PDE4), statins,
angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, theophylline and tumor necrosis factor inhibitors in COPD management
will be reviewed. Targeting COPD inflammation with the goal of reducing exacerbations is a major focus of current
clinical practice & outcome research.
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Keywords
COPD, GOLD, Spiromerty, Roflumilas, Bronchodilators
Citation
Braman R C, Alam M T, Islam M M S U, Biswas G, Howlader M A R, Fattah S A. Management of Inflammation in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease-Update. Faridpur Medical College Journal. 2013 Jan; 8(1): 34-39.