SleepCited

Asthma as a disruption in iron homeostasis.

Andrew J Ghio
Review Biometals : an international journal on the role of metal ions in biology, biochemistry, and medicine 2016

Diseño del estudio

Tipo de estudio
review
Población
Narrative review of asthma phenotypes; includes neonates, pregnant women, menstruating women, smokers, obese individuals, and those with infections; also covers comorbidities like eczema, urticaria, RLS, and pulmonary hypertension
Intervención
Asthma as a disruption in iron homeostasis. Inhaled iron (proposed therapeutic intervention; dose not specified)
Comparador
None
Resultado primario
Association between iron deficiency and asthma phenotypes; proposed mechanistic pathway linking iron homeostasis to asthma
Dirección del efecto
Positive
Riesgo de sesgo
Unclear

Resumen

Over several decades, asthma has evolved from being recognized as a single disease to include a diverse group of phenotypes with dissimilar natural histories, pathophysiologies, responses to treatment, and distinctive molecular pathways. With the application of Occam's razor to asthma, it is proposed that there is one cause underlying the numerous phenotypes of this disease and that the responsible molecular pathway is a deficiency of iron in the lung tissues. This deficiency can be either absolute (e.g. asthma in the neonate and during both pregnancy and menstruation) or functional (e.g. asthma associated with infections, smoking, and obesity). Comparable associations between asthma co-morbidity (e.g. eczema, urticaria, restless leg syndrome, and pulmonary hypertension) with iron deficiency support such a shared mechanistic pathway. Therapies directed at asthma demonstrate a capacity to impact iron homeostasis, further strengthening the relationship. Finally, pathophysiologic events producing asthma, including inflammation, increases in Th2 cells, and muscle contraction, can correlate with iron availability. Recognition of a potential association between asthma and an absolute and/or functional iron deficiency suggests specific therapeutic interventions including inhaled iron.

TL;DR

Recognition of a potential association between asthma and an absolute and/or functional iron deficiency suggests specific therapeutic interventions including inhaled iron.

Utilizado en revisiones de evidencia