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Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: etiology and natural history

Issue 4, 2007

HOT TOPICS IN RESPIRATORY MEDICINE
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: etiology and natural history

Publ. date:2007
ISBN:978-88-89881-25-5
ISSN:1973-9664
E-ISSN:2036-0886
DOI:10.4147/HTR-070400


Abstract

It is well established that cigarette smoking is the primary cause of COPD.  However, research to date shows that other risk factors may be important and should also be considered. This issue of Hot Topics in Respiratory Medicine carefully analyzes the etiology and natural course of COPD.  The first chapter summarizes the major etiopathogenic factors after tobacco smoke. Dr. Ramírez-Venegas et al give an extensive review of the impact of exposure to biofuel smoke, which is an emerging clinical single-disease entity in developing countries such as Mexico and India, and other countries where indoor open-flame cooking is common. After discussing experimental evidence and studies related to biofuel exposure, the authors complete the chapter with a description of the societal burden derived from this exposure. The chapter then focuses on the clinical and functional patterns of COPD - referring to symptoms and chronic inflammation, lung function in women exposed to biofuel smoke, and pulmonary hypertension due to impairment of blood gas exchange - and the prognostic factors related to this condition. 

Prof. Górecka, from the National Lung Diseases Research Institute of Warsaw (Poland), brilliantly summarizes in the next chapter the role of cigarette smoking and the implications of primary and secondary prevention of smoking. Prof. Górecka reviews evidence-based approaches to help patients quit smoking, beginning with behavioral therapy and finishing with the most up-to-date pharmacological treatments  of nicotine addiction. At the end of her chapter, Prof. Górecka suggests that not all COPD patients who smoke should be considered as recalcitrant smokers. Large studies of smoking cessation have demonstrated that effective treatments do exist and may improve the disease progression. 

To complete this interesting issue, Dr. Seersholm links current knowledge about the role of inflammation in the pathogenesis of COPD at the molecular level to clinical outcomes, in terms of morbidity, mortality, and survival. The author reviews the essential points concerning the natural history of COPD (such as systemic inflammation or the role of exacerbations) and highlights the latest findings from ongoing international pharmacologic clinical trials.

Table of contents

FOREWORD
by Joan B. Soriano


ARTICLES
Other causes of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: exposure to biofuel smoke
Rogelio Perez-Padilla, Rosa María Rivera, Alejandra Ramírez Venegas, Raúl H. Sansores
Nicotine addiction and smoking cessation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients
Dorota M. Górecka
Natural course of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Niels Seersholm


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Editor-in-chief
Marc Miravitlles - MD

Over the last 15 years there has been a decrease in mortality due to preventable diseases, with the exception of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which is an example that highlights the r...
 
     
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