Postviral Wheezing In Childhood: Disregulation Of Airway Tone?
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$577,040.00
Summary
Asthma is a very common childhood condition that is becoming increasingly more common. Wheezing is common in infants and young children following viral infections and is often thought of as the first manifestation of asthma. However, many children and infants who wheeze with viral infections appear to grow out of asthma in their teenage years. Asthma that persists into adult life is usually associated with allergies to common environmental allergens, such as house dust mite and grass pollens. Ho ....Asthma is a very common childhood condition that is becoming increasingly more common. Wheezing is common in infants and young children following viral infections and is often thought of as the first manifestation of asthma. However, many children and infants who wheeze with viral infections appear to grow out of asthma in their teenage years. Asthma that persists into adult life is usually associated with allergies to common environmental allergens, such as house dust mite and grass pollens. However, many infants who wheeze with viral infections, especially in the first year of life, do not develop allergies in later life, raising the possibility that they did not have the same type of asthma as those whose symptoms persist. This project will study the effects of viral infections on lung function to determine whether particular types of virus can have detrimental effects of lung function lasting for years. We will also examine whether the age at which the infection occurs and the severity of the infection influence the long-term outcome. The project involves studying infants during the recovery phase of respiratory viral infections, older children years after documented infections and experimental animal models that have been infected under controlled conditions. By determining whether respiratory viral infections can have long-term effects on lung function that can mimic asthma, we will advance our understanding of how asthma develops. In addition, specific treatment and preventative strategies could then be developed to prevent these long-term abnormalities, instead of relying on asthma medication (especially inhaled corticosteroids) as is the current practice. Preventative strategies could include encouraging the development of specific vaccines.Read moreRead less
Evolution Of Airway Function And Inflammation In Early Cystic Fibrosis Lung Disease
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$494,447.00
Summary
Our goal is to evaluate if lung function can identify the onset of early lung disease in infants with cystic fibrosis (CF). We aim to evaluate: - Changes in lung function in infants with CF. - Associations between lung function and lung inflammation and infection. - Links between infant lung function and disease severity at 2 years of age. The long term aims are to determine how useful lung function will be in trials of novel treatments for the early treatment of CF.
Neurons And Neurotransmitters That Control Phasic Laryngeal Motoneuron Activity
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$278,736.00
Summary
Opening and closing of the vocal cords with breathing is an automatic function that is present before birth and is essential for life. Opening the vocal cords allows inspired air to enter the lungs and closure serves to protect the lungs from food and drink. Failure of coordination is associated with a range of life-threatening airway disorders, particularly in newborns. Nerves in the brain and the chemicals they release transmit the rhythm of breathing to the nerves that control the vocal cords ....Opening and closing of the vocal cords with breathing is an automatic function that is present before birth and is essential for life. Opening the vocal cords allows inspired air to enter the lungs and closure serves to protect the lungs from food and drink. Failure of coordination is associated with a range of life-threatening airway disorders, particularly in newborns. Nerves in the brain and the chemicals they release transmit the rhythm of breathing to the nerves that control the vocal cords. However, the specific neurons and chemicals involved are not known. This information is crucial in understanding the chemical disorder in the brain responsible for the loss of coordination between breathing and vocal cord activity, and in formulating strategies to treat these conditions using drugs that correct the chemical disorder. By way of example, we have used our animal studies to develop the first ever drug trial to treat children with congenital vocal cord paralysis, whose vocal cords fail to open with inspiration and require a tracheostomy. We have selected a drug that corrects the proposed disorder of brain chemistry responsible for this condition. This approach will serve as a template for the management of a variety of other life-threatening airway disorders in newborns using drugs that act on the brain. We will now carry out further experiments to identify the nerves and their chemicals that control the motoneurons that drive the vocal cords. The key experiment involves recording from inside an individual vocal cord motoneuron in the brain while simultaneously applying a range of chemicals to its external surface. By recording the response of the nerve, we can determine which chemicals control its activity. Using our knowledge of the pattern of chemicals released by respiratory neurons, we will identify neurons for further study, and establish chemical and anatomical relationships between the respiratory nerve and the vocal cord nerve.Read moreRead less
Functional Characterisation Of Novel Metabolites In Asthma And Identification Of New Biomarkers
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$829,922.00
Summary
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways that represents a major health burden. Severe asthma represents 10% of those suffering the disease and poses an urgent problem due to exacerbations and resistance to current therapies. We have conducted the first study of the metabolites that are altered in the airways of patients with severe asthma and identified functional metabolites and disease biomarkers. We now aim to assess the function of these molecules in asthma disease models.
We will conduct a survey of respiratory symptoms, lung function, smoking status, occupational exposures, and other risk factors among 3200 people aged 40 years and over living in five Australian communities: Melbourne, Sydney, Tasmania, Busselton (WA), and the Kimberley region (WA). In the Kimberley we will survey 400 Aboriginal people and 400 non-Aboriginal people. We will use a survey methodology that has been developed by an international expert panel and has been implemented in many other co ....We will conduct a survey of respiratory symptoms, lung function, smoking status, occupational exposures, and other risk factors among 3200 people aged 40 years and over living in five Australian communities: Melbourne, Sydney, Tasmania, Busselton (WA), and the Kimberley region (WA). In the Kimberley we will survey 400 Aboriginal people and 400 non-Aboriginal people. We will use a survey methodology that has been developed by an international expert panel and has been implemented in many other countries (in North and South America, Asia, and Europe). This study will provide the first nationally-representative information on the burden of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and the opportunities for health gain by improving the management of this illness. In Australia, COPD is a relatively silent and under-recognised disease but nevertheless is the third most important contributor to the burden of disease and the third leading cause of hospital admission as well as being the underlying cause of 4.2% of all deaths. The information we will collect is needed to form a basis for prevention and disease management interventions to reduce the burden of COPD, particularly among population sub-groups who are disproportionately affected, either due to greater exposure to risk factors (mainly tobacco smoking and occupation), greater susceptibility, under-recognition and under-diagnosis, or inadequate disease management. Importantly, the study will serve to raise awareness about the hazards of smoking for all Australians. By identifying target groups, prevalent exposures and management deficiencies, it will lead the way towards policy-relevant randomised controlled trials testing community-based interventions to prevent COPD and-or manage it more effectively. The information collected will help advance knowledge of the prevalence, burden and treatment of COPD that will be relevant to communities throughout the world.Read moreRead less
The Emerging Problem Of Non-tuberculous Mycobacteria Infection: Understanding Aetiology, Geospatial Epidemiology And Developing Interventions
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$988,791.00
Summary
This project will be largest study of non-tuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) infection in cystic fibrosis. By combining growing the bacteria with detailed information from the CF patient data registry, geographical location and environmental conditions, this study will provide novel insights into factors associated with NTM. Gene sequencing and airway infection profiling will extend understanding and has the potential to identify novel risk factors and biomarkers for NTM-related airways disease.
The health effects of electronic cigarette use are virtually unknown. They have only recently been introduced into widespread use, and as such their effects on human health will not be known for many years. We will use our expertise in exposure models and health outcome measurement to provide timely hard-data on their potential to impact health – data that are urgently required to guide policy makers in this area.
The Link Between Vitamin D Deficiency And Chronic Lung Disease Is Due To Increased Airway Smooth Muscle
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$644,067.00
Summary
Vitamin D deficiency is a global public health problem. It is becoming increasingly evident that vitamin D deficiency increases the severity of chronic lung disease. In this study we propose to examine a mechanism that we think clearly explains this association. These studies are critical to understanding how deficiencies in key nutrients can impact on chronic lung disease and will provide the data necessary to guide public health policy to reduce the burden of disease in the community.