Author: Capelozzi, Vera Luiza; Parra, Edwin Roger; Ximenes, Manoel; Bammann, Ricardo Helbert; Barbas, Carmen Silvia Valente; Duarte, Marid Irmd Seixas
                    Title: Pathological and ultrastructural analysis of surgical lung biopsies in patients with swineâ€origin influenza type A/H1N1 and acute respiratory failure  Cord-id: iv18eiap  Document date: 2010_12_25
                    ID: iv18eiap
                    
                    Snippet: BACKGROUND: Cases of H1N1 and other pulmonary infections evolve to acute respiratory failure and death when coâ€infections or lung injury predominate over the immune response, thus requiring early diagnosis to improve treatment. OBJECTIVE: To perform a detailed histopathological analysis of the open lung biopsy specimens from five patients with ARDS with confirmed H1N1. METHODS: Lung specimens underwent microbiologic analysis, and examination by optical and electron microscopy. Immunophenotypin
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: BACKGROUND: Cases of H1N1 and other pulmonary infections evolve to acute respiratory failure and death when coâ€infections or lung injury predominate over the immune response, thus requiring early diagnosis to improve treatment. OBJECTIVE: To perform a detailed histopathological analysis of the open lung biopsy specimens from five patients with ARDS with confirmed H1N1. METHODS: Lung specimens underwent microbiologic analysis, and examination by optical and electron microscopy. Immunophenotyping was used to characterize macrophages, natural killer, T and B cells, and expression of cytokines and iNOS. RESULTS: The pathological features observed were necrotizing bronchiolitis, diffuse alveolar damage, alveolar hemorrhage and abnormal immune response. Ultrastructural analysis showed viralâ€like particles in all cases. CONCLUSIONS: Viralâ€like particles can be successfully demonstrated in lung tissue by ultrastructural examination, without confirmation of the virus by RTâ€PCR on nasopharyngeal aspirates. Bronchioles and epithelium, rather than endothelium, are probably the primary target of infection, and diffuse alveolar damage the consequence of the effect of airways obliteration and dysfunction on innate immunity, suggesting that treatment should be focused on epithelial repair.
 
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