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The resolution of inflammation

Nature Reviews Immunology, 2012
In 2012, Nature Reviews Immunology organized a conference that brought together scientists and clinicians from both academia and industry to discuss one of the most pressing questions in medicine--how do we turn off rampant, undesirable inflammation? There is a growing appreciation that, similarly to the initiation of inflammation, the resolution of ...
Buckley, Christopher D.   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Understanding resolution of inflammation in periodontal diseases: Is chronic inflammatory periodontitis a failure to resolve?

Periodontology, 2020
Periodontitis is an infectious-inflammatory disease that results from loss of balance between the commensal microbiome and the host response. The hyper-inflammatory, uncontrolled inflammatory immune lesion promotes tissue damage and impedes effective ...
T. V. Van Dyke, C. Sima
semanticscholar   +1 more source

DELineating resolution of inflammation

Nature Immunology, 2018
The resolution of inflammation is a protective response. The identification and characterization of new players that boost this response might inform the development of novel therapies for non-resolving inflammatory diseases.
openaire   +2 more sources

Inflammation revisited: inflammation versus resolution of inflammation following myocardial infarction

Basic Research in Cardiology, 2014
Myocardial infarction (MI) is the main cause for the progression of the left ventricle towards congestive heart failure. The optimal healing after MI requires timely induction and resolution of inflammation. Primarily, there have been a number of strategies applied to inhibit the post-MI inflammation but approaches that focus on the resolution of ...
Vasundhara, Kain   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Resolution of Inflammation

1988
For centuries, the inflammatory response has been regarded as an important consequence of injury and one that normally leads to repair and restoration of function. From the battlefield observations of John Hunter in 1794 to the elegant vascular studies of Cohnheim (1889) and the descriptions of cell migration by Metchnikoff (1891) a century later, the ...
Christopher Haslett, Peter M. Henson
openaire   +1 more source

Resolution of inflammation in arthritis

Seminars in Immunopathology, 2019
Rheumatoid arthritis is among the most frequent and severe chronic inflammatory diseases. The disease is characterized by ongoing synovial inflammation, which leads to the destruction of cartilage and bone. In RA, the mechanisms of resolution of inflammation, which are normally intact in the joints, are either suppressed or overruled.
openaire   +2 more sources

Resolution of Lung Inflammation by CD44

Science, 2002
Successful repair after tissue injury and inflammation requires resolution of the inflammatory response and removal of extracellular matrix breakdown products. We have examined whether the cell-surface adhesion molecule and hyaluronan receptor CD44 plays a role in resolving lung inflammation.
Priit, Teder   +7 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Cellular resolution of inflammation—catabasis

Wound Repair and Regeneration, 2012
AbstractControlled inflammation has become a central focus in chronic disease therapeutics. Exaggerated inflammation is a common factor that contributes to matrix destruction, cellular senescence, and nonhealing in a variety of disease processes. Efforts at controlling inflammation have traditionally concentrated on systemic antagonists to inflammation
openaire   +2 more sources

Resolution of Inflammation

2006
Inflammation requires clearance of the inciting pathogen, then orchestrated removal of the burden of leukocytes and other cells influxed into the inflamed site along with dissipation of the pro (or anti) inflammatory mediator cascades. We now recognize that this resolution process is strictly controlled by a number of mediators and adhesion molecules ...
openaire   +1 more source

Resolution of mucosal inflammation

2008
Inflammation of the mucosal lining of the gastrointestinal tract is not only common, it is often described as ‘normal’. This is particularly the case in the intestine, where a single layer of epithelial cells separates the vascular and immune systems from billions of microbes.
John L. Wallace, Philip M. Sherman
openaire   +1 more source

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