Effects Of Corticosteroids On Asthma

215 Words1 Page

Corticosteroids are the only treatment that suppresses the inflammation in asthmatic airways; this action underlies the important improvement in asthma symptoms and prevention of exacerbations. At cellular level, corticosteroids decrease the number of inflammatory cells in the airways, including eosinophils, mast cells, dendritic cells and T cells. These major effects of corticosteroids are produced through inhibiting the recruitment of inflammatory cells into the airway by suppressing the production of chemotactic mediators and adhesion molecules and by inhibiting the survival in the airways of inflammatory cells. Furthermore, Epithelial cells may be a main cellular target for inhaled corticosteroids, which are the mainstay of modern asthma management. So, corticosteroids have a broad spectrum of anti-inflammatory effects in asthma, with inhibition of multiple inflammatory mediators and inflammatory cells. …show more content…

The broad anti-inflammatory profile of corticosteroids accounts for their marked clinical effectiveness in asthma. Any attempts to find alternative treatments that are more specific, such as inhibitors of single mediators, have been unsuccessful, showing the importance of simultaneously inhibiting many inflammatory targets. Any explanation of the anti-inflammatory effects of corticosteroids needs to account for this broad spectrum of anti-inflammatory

More about Effects Of Corticosteroids On Asthma

Open Document