Association between obesity and asthma - epidemiology, pathophysiology and clinical profile.
TL;DR: It is now acknowledged that obesity precedes asthma symptoms, and obesity-induced asthma is now considered a distinct asthma phenotype, and one of the most important determinants of asthma phenotypes.
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Abstract: Obesity is a risk factor for asthma, and obese asthmatics have lower disease control and increased symptom severity. Several putative links have been proposed, including genetics, mechanical restriction of the chest and the intake of corticosteroids. The most consistent evidence, however, comes from studies of cytokines produced by the adipose tissue called adipokines. Adipokine imbalance is associated with both proinflammatory status and asthma. Although reverse causation has been proposed, it is now acknowledged that obesity precedes asthma symptoms. Nevertheless, prenatal origins of both conditions complicate the search for causality. There is a confirmed role of neuro-immune cross-talk mediating obesity-induced asthma, with leptin playing a key role in these processes. Obesity-induced asthma is now considered a distinct asthma phenotype. In fact, it is one of the most important determinants of asthma phenotypes. Two main subphenotypes have been distinguished. The first phenotype, which affects adult women, is characterised by later onset and is more likely to be non-atopic. The childhood obesity-induced asthma phenotype is characterised by primary and predominantly atopic asthma. In obesity-induced asthma, the immune responses are shifted towards T helper (Th) 1 polarisation rather than the typical atopic Th2 immunological profile. Moreover, obese asthmatics might respond differently to environmental triggers. The high cost of treatment of obesity-related asthma, and the burden it causes for the patients and their families call for urgent intervention. Phenotype-specific approaches seem to be crucial for the success of prevention and treatment.
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Citations
Animal models of obesity and diabetes mellitus
Maximilian Kleinert,Christoffer Clemmensen,Susanna M. Hofmann,Mary Courtney Moore,Simone Renner,Stephen C. Woods,Peter Huypens,Johannes Beckers,Martin Hrabé de Angelis,Annette Schürmann,Mostafa Bakhti,Martin Klingenspor,Mark L. Heiman,Alan D. Cherrington,Michael Ristow,Heiko Lickert,Eckhard Wolf,Peter J. Havel,Timo D. Müller,Matthias H. Tschöp +19 more
TL;DR: This Review consolidates the key information on the currently available animal models of obesity and diabetes and highlights the advantages, limitations and important caveats of each of these models.
Shared genetic and experimental links between obesity-related traits and asthma subtypes in UK Biobank
Zhaozhong Zhu,Yanjun Guo,Huwenbo Shi,Cong-Lin Liu,Ronald Allan M Panganiban,Wonil Chung,Luke J. O’Connor,Blanca E. Himes,Steven Gazal,Kohei Hasegawa,Carlos A. Camargo,Lu Qi,Miriam F. Moffatt,Frank B. Hu,Quan Lu,William O.C.M. Cookson,Liming Liang +16 more
TL;DR: This work identified shared genetic components between obesity-related traits and specific asthma subtypes, reinforcing the hypothesis that obesity causally increases the risk of asthma, and identifying molecular pathways that may underlie both obesity and asthma.
320
Skin changes in the obese patient.
TL;DR: The effect of obesity on the skin is reviewed, including how increased body mass index affects skin physiology, skin barrier, collagen structure, and wound healing.
149
Association of Childhood Obesity With Atopic and Nonatopic Asthma: Results From the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1999–2006
Minal Patel,Harvey L. Leo +1 more
TL;DR: The role of C-reactive protein (CRP) in the association between obesity and asthma among a nationally representative sample of US children and young adults was examined.
128
Obesity increases airway smooth muscle responses to contractile agonists.
Sarah Orfanos,Joseph A. Jude,Brian Deeney,Gaoyuan Cao,Deepa Rastogi,Mark van Zee,Ivan Pushkarsky,Hector E. Muñoz,Robert Damoiseaux,Dino Di Carlo,Reynold Jr Panettieri +10 more
TL;DR: These studies suggest that obesity induces a retained phenotype of hyperresponsiveness in cultured human airway smooth muscle cells.
58
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