The role of nerves in asthma

BJ Undem, MJ Carr - Current allergy and asthma reports, 2002 - Springer
BJ Undem, MJ Carr
Current allergy and asthma reports, 2002Springer
Asthma is a syndrome characterized by reversible episodes of wheezing, cough, and
sensations of chest tightness and breathlessness. These symptoms are secondary to
changes in the activity of the nervous system. The mechanisms by which the nervous system
is altered such that the symptoms of asthma occur have not yet been elucidated. Airway
inflammation associated with asthma may affect neuronal activity at several points along the
neural reflex pathway, in cluding the function of the primary afferent (sensory) nerves …
Abstract
Asthma is a syndrome characterized by reversible episodes of wheezing, cough, and sensations of chest tightness and breathlessness. These symptoms are secondary to changes in the activity of the nervous system. The mechanisms by which the nervous system is altered such that the symptoms of asthma occur have not yet been elucidated. Airway inflammation associated with asthma may affect neuronal activity at several points along the neural reflex pathway, in cluding the function of the primary afferent (sensory) nerves, integration within the central nervous system, synaptic transmission within autonomic ganglia, and transmission at the level of the postganglionic neuroeffector junction. We provide a brief overview of these interactions and the relevance they may have to asthma.
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