Treatment of COPD exacerbations: antibiotics

Wilson R.

Source: Eur Respir Rev 2005; 14: 32-38
Journal Issue: September 2005 - 14 (94)
Disease area: Airway diseases, Respiratory infections

Congress or journal article abstractFull text journal articlePDF journal article, handout or slides

Abstract

The debate about the importance of bacterial infection in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease will continue. About half of exacerbations yield positive sputum bacteriology, and the isolation rate can be increased by selection of purulent samples. However, bacteria are also isolated in the stable state. The presence of bacteria in sputum alone during an exacerbation does not prove causation. Bacteria have been associated with airway inflammation both in the stable state, when the level of inflammation is related to the size of the bacterial load, and during exacerbations, when resolution of the inflammation is related to bacterial eradication. New evidence has been obtained from epidemiological, immunological and antibiotic studies that supports a role for bacterial infection in causing neutrophilic airway inflammation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and if accepted should lead to new research in the use of antibiotics.


Rating: 0
You must login to grade this presentation.

Share or cite this content

Citations should be made in the following way:
Wilson R.. Treatment of COPD exacerbations: antibiotics. Eur Respir Rev 2005; 14: 32-38

You must login to share this Presentation/Article on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or by email.

Member's Comments

No comment yet.
You must Login to comment this presentation.