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Autoimmune Aspects of Lung Disease (Respiratory Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapy) [Hardcover]

David A. Isenberg (Editor), Stephen G. Spiro (Editor)

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Book Description

June 1998 0817657193 978-0817657192
The lung forms an integral part of the body's immune system and is subject to a range of diseases which are either autoimmune in nature or have clear-cut immunological abnormalities. "Autoimmune Aspects of Lung Disease" provides a concise review of the lung's role in the immune system and a detailed account of both primary and secondary lung diseases which are characterised by immunological perturbation or frank autoimmunity. The volume presents a detailed, up-to-date account of disorders ranging from infection to neoplasia and is written in both an informative and stimulating style by a prestigious group of authors. The chapters are extensively referenced and provide numerous insights into the aetiopathogenesis and clinical features and treatment of immunologically-linked pulmonary disease. The book is intended as both an overview for physicians and scientists with an established interest in diseases of the lung, immunologists seeking to learn more about relevant disorders in the lung and general physicians, whether specialists or in training, seeking to enrich their knowledge of the links between the pulmonary and immune systems.
--This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

From The New England Journal of Medicine

It is hard to imagine that just a short time ago it was possible to think about lung disease with little attention to immunity and inflammation. After all, pulmonary pathophysiology was, and remains, best described in biomechanical and biochemical terms. Asthma is a disease of the airways, with impaired air movement that results in increased expiratory pressures and lung volumes and disastrous air trapping. Occupational lung diseases often result in diffuse scarring that leads to decreased lung volumes. Tumors are space-occupying lesions of the lung airway or parenchyma. In pneumonia, air exchange is impaired even as the febrile patient's metabolic rate requires improved oxygenation. And in many conditions, a mismatch between ventilation and perfusion causes predictable hypoxia and respiratory acidosis.

All these statements are true, yet they are hardly adequate descriptions. For the lung, like the skin and the gut, is a remarkably active immunologic organ, blessed with a vast blood supply and challenged by a massive interface with a frequently toxic and septic environment. In Autoimmune Aspects of Lung Disease, 23 authors address the consequences of the responses of the immune system at this interface. The results are fascinating, well written, and comprehensive.

The book has many notable strengths. The chapters on rheumatic disease and vasculitides are especially clear and comprehensive. Robinson's treatment of the immunologic basis of asthma is excellent, and Bernstein's discussion of drug-induced lung disease summarizes a great deal of disparate information nicely. The bookend chapters, a review of the lung and the immune system by Catterall and Sheffield and a summary by Isenberg and Spiro, are clear and insightful. Furthermore, the book has been edited well. There is little redundant material, and there are few gaps. The graphics are clear, appropriate, and informative.

In fact, my only quibble with this book is its relatively narrow title. Although the chapters on rheumatic disease and vasculitides clearly fall within the autoimmune focus of the title, the book also contains excellent minireviews of asthma, cystic fibrosis, human immunodeficiency virus-induced lung disease, granulomatous disorders, drug-induced lung disease, and lung cancer, among others. Are these autoimmune diseases? Well, perhaps they are, but not without some further explanation. A more accurate title for the book -- and one that would have attracted a wider readership -- would have been, "The Lung and the Immune System."

Reviewed by Jay E. Slater, M.D.
Copyright © 1998 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
The lungs are in a uniquely vulnerable position in that they are constantly exposed to a wide range of inhaled foreign particles, including microbial pathogens, allergens and environmental toxins. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
pulmonary microenvironment, shrinking lung syndrome, organising pneumonia, pulmonary immune response, acute lupus pneumonitis, alveolar haemorrhage, vasculitic phase, accessory cell function, autoimmune rheumatic diseases, mild lung disease, methotrexate pneumonitis, pulmonary arteritis, pulmonary sarcoidosis, lung haemorrhage, patients with sarcoidosis, fibrosing alveolitis, pulmonary cells, active sarcoidosis, allergen challenge, vasculitic syndromes, atopic asthmatic subjects, irreversible fibrosis, interstitial lung disease, pulmonary vasculitis, bronchial biopsies
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Rev Respir Dis, Cohen Tervaert, Exp Med, Arthritis Rheum, Clin Invest, Ann Intern Med, New York, Ann Rheum Dis, Respir Crit Care Med, Immunol Today, Eur Respir, Respir Cell Mol Biol, Cancer Res, Del Prete, Marcel Dekker, Proc Natl Acad Sci, Shaw Figure, Arch Intern Med, Clin Exp Immunol, Respir Cell Mot Biol, Rheum Dis Clin, Birkhauser Verlag Basel, Clin Chest Med, Erp Med, Esp Med
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