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Distinctive characteristics of bronchial reticular basement membrane and vessel remodelling in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and in asthma: they are not the same disease
Author(s) -
Soltani Amir,
Muller Hans Konrad,
Sohal Sukhwinder S,
Reid David W,
Weston Steve,
WoodBaker Richard,
Walters Eugene Haydn
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
histopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.626
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1365-2559
pISSN - 0309-0167
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2559.2011.04147.x
Subject(s) - copd , asthma , basement membrane , reticular connective tissue , medicine , pathology , basal membrane , vascularity , pathological , cardiology
Soltani A, Muller H K, Sohal S S, Reid D W, Weston S, Wood‐Baker R & Walters E H
(2012) Histopathology 60, 964–970 Distinctive characteristics of bronchial reticular basement membrane and vessel remodelling in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and in asthma: they are not the same disease Aims: This study compared reticular basement membrane (Rbm) and vascular remodelling within the bronchial mucosa of subjects with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) with those from patients with asthma, to test the ‘Dutch hypothesis’ of whether these are essentially the same or different pathological conditions. Methods and results: Bronchoscopic biopsies were stained with anti‐collagen IV antibody; 18 current smoking COPD, 10 symptomatic asthmatics and 13 healthy non‐smoking controls were studied. The Rbm in COPD was fragmented, non‐homogeneous, variable in thickness and hypervascular, whereas in asthma the Rbm was compact and homogeneous with no evidence of increased vascularity compared to controls. Length of Rbm splitting presented as percentage of Rbm length was used to measure fragmentation; it was greater in COPD than in controls and asthmatics [median (range) 20.7% (0.4–68.5) versus 5.3% (0.0–21.7) versus 1.5% (0.0–15.1), P < 0.001]. The number of Rbm vessels/mm Rbm [median (range) 10.1 (1.6–23.0) versus 4.5 (0.0–26.4) versus 4.4 (0.4–8.1), P < 0.01] and area of Rbm vessels, μm 2 /mm Rbm [median (range) 953 (115–2456) versus 462 (0–3263) versus 426 (32–2216), P < 0.05] was also increased in COPD compared to normal subjects and asthmatics. Conclusions: The characteristics of Rbm remodelling are quite different in asthma and COPD.