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submitted by ace9yak(8)
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fa 2019 pg 662, Inhalation injury and sequelae. in the inhalation injury and sequelae part they say signed nasal hairs or soot in the oropharynx -> decreased activity of airway cilia as there is soot overlying them and cant function properly tobacco has silica (fa 2019 pg 663) - silica can disrupt phagolysosomes and impair macrophages -> decreased alveolar macrophage function as for the increased mucus production and secretion - idk i figured there is an irritant and your body will be trying to clear it some how, i guess think about COPD

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meryen13  i was so confused by the "1 week" i was thinking is one week enough to decrease the macrophages? or are they gonna be hyper active to clean the smoke particles. smh +10
shieldmaiden  Acute cigarette smoking "behaves" differently than chronic. While acutely you would see decreased number and function (phagocytic and proinflammatory) of alveolar macrophages (AM), chronic smokers have shown an increased number of AMs, likely as an adaptive mechanism to offset the epithelial changes. +3



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submitted by โˆ—privatejoker(54)
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Can anyone explain why macrophage activity would be decreased in this? I wanted to pick one that had both mucus secreting activity as being increased along with increased macrophage activity with concomitant decrease in ciliary activity but this wasn't an option so I went with all increased. Since it's well-established that macrophages cause damage in emphysema (especially in smokers due to constant irritation from the smoke), how is it possible that macrophage activity would go DOWN?

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kard  Mucus hypersecretion --> Induce airflow limitation in COPD "potential risk factor for accelerated decline in lung function" Cigarette smoke impairs both the phagocytic and respiratory burst function of neutrophils! Macrophages-->activated by cigarette smoke extract to release inflammatory mediators COPD--> alveolar macrophages and neutrophils are defective in their antimicrobial functions. Macrophages from COPD patients--> show reduced phagocytic uptake of bacteria. "Streptococcus pneumoniae and nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae" I Hope This Helps... +25



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submitted by โˆ—angelbarrera(2)
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Abnormal phagolysosome fusion in pulmonary alveolar macrophages of rats exposed chronically to cigarette smoke.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/6206755/#:~:text=Cigarette%20smoking%20is%20strongly%20associated%20with%20functional%20and,antimicrobial%20activity%20of%20these%20cells%20might%20be%20diminished.

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