Results 221 to 230 of about 259,795 (258)
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Allergic inflammation: cellular aspects

Allergy, 1999
SummaryTissue eosinophilia and IgE production during allergic inflammation are under the regulation of Th2‐type T cells. In addition, mast cells, basophils, and possibly eosinophils represent alternative sources of these cytokines, particularly UL‐4, which augments Th2 T‐cell development and local IgE production by B cells.Corticosteroids act by ...
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Platelet Activation During Allergic Inflammation

Inflammation, 2007
Blood platelets, apart from their traditional and well-recognised function in haemostasis, play an essential and active role in allergic inflammation e.g. through their participation in cell recruitment from blood to site of immune reactivity as a result of direct interactions with leukocytes, and through the release of inflammatory mediators. Platelet
Alicja, Kasperska-Zajac, Barbara, Rogala
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Allergic and Anaphylactoid Inflammation

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1967
To the Editor:— The first reports on allergic phenomena uniformly stressed that sensitization produces a state without protection (anaphylaxis) against minimal amounts of the antigen. Testing procedures for the detection of allergies are only reliable when carried out with minimal amounts of the allergen.
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Exercise Inhibits Allergic Lung Inflammation

International Journal of Sports Medicine, 2012
Aerobic conditioning (AC) performed either during or after sensitization reduces allergic inflammation in mice; however, the effects of AC performed before and during allergic sensitization on airway inflammation are unknown. Mice were divided into Control, AC, OVA, and AC + OVA groups. Mice were trained in a treadmill followed by either ovalbumin (OVA)
A C D, Silva   +8 more
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Melatonin modulates allergic lung inflammation

Journal of Pineal Research, 2001
Asthma is an inflammatory lung disease characterized by cell migration, bronchoconstriction and hyperresponsiveness, and can be induced, as an experimental model, by ovalbumin sensitization followed by a challenge. In addition to the well‐known immunostimulatory effects of melatonin, research has identified some of its anti‐inflammatory properties.
E, Martins   +5 more
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Eosinophil adhesion in allergic inflammation

Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1994
Eosinophil adhesion has been studied in some detail in recent years, and a number of interesting observations have emerged. As with other aspects of eosinophil biology, there appears to be a greater similarity with basophils than with neutrophils in their pattern of adhesion interactions.
Wardlaw, AJ, Symon, FS, Walsh, GM
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CC chemokines in allergic inflammation

Immunology Today, 1994
CC chemokines are small inducible proteins that are related to interleukin 8. Recent studies have shown that several CC chemokines, MCP-1, MCP-3, RANTES and MIP-1 alpha, act on basophils and/or eosinophils via GTP-binding protein-coupled receptors. Marco Baggiolini and Clemens Dahinden discuss the involvement of CC chemokines in the recruitment and ...
M, Baggiolini, C A, Dahinden
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Adhesion Molecules in Allergic Inflammation

American Review of Respiratory Disease, 1993
Allergic inflammation is characterized by recruitment of specific leukocyte subpopulations from blood into tissue and requires a series of cell adhesion-molecule-mediated interactions between postcapillary vascular endothelium and the leukocyte cell surface. Three major groups are involved: selectins, integrins, and the immunoglobulin gene superfamily.
C H, Smith, J N, Barker, T H, Lee
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IL-9 in Allergic Inflammation

International Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 2004
Th2 type cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-4, IL-5, IL-9, and IL-13 are important mediators in allergic inflammation. The present review will focus on the role of IL-9 in allergic inflammation. The structure and genomic architecture of IL-9 and its receptor, the source of IL-9 and its regulation as well as its effects on different cell types will be ...
Hans-Peter, Hauber   +2 more
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[Allergic inflammation].

Arkhiv patologii, 1984
Current ideas of allergic inflammation reflected in the concept of immune inflammation are described. This concept considers immune inflammation to be an immune response mediated by a certain immunity reaction which gives the inflammation a number of qualitative and quantitative differences.
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