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Acquired Ciliary Defects in Nasal Epithelium of Children with Acute Viral Upper Respiratory Infections

List of authors.
  • Johnny L. Carson, Ph.D.,
  • Albert M. Collier, M.D.,
  • and Shih-chin S. Hu, M.S.

Abstract

Ciliary function and mucociliary clearance are primary mechanisms of defense in the respiratory tract. We found that infections by several common respiratory viruses in children were associated with ciliary abnormalities that could be detected on ultrastructural examination of the nasal epithelium. Dysmorphic ciliary forms involving microtubular aberrations were observed most often in the early stages of illness in focal sites of the nasal mucosa. Normal epithelial organization and ciliary ultrastructure appeared to be reestablished during the convalescent period, from 2 to 10 weeks after infection. These observations suggest that interference with ciliogenic mechanisms leading to transient, compromised mucociliary clearance may represent a fundamental pathophysiologic disturbance in some respiratory viral infections. (N Engl J Med 1985; 312:463–8.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by a SCOR grant (HL 19171) from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and by a Cooperative Agreement (CR-807392) with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

We are indebted to Drs. Wallace A. Clyde, Jr., Floyd W. Denny, and Frederick W. Henderson for review and helpful comments in the preparation of this manuscript; to Dr. Margaret Sanyal, Carolyn Blount, Jutta Kuenzler, Karen Philbrick, and Jessie Watkins for excellent technical assistance; and to the parents and children at the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Center for their participation in this project.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Pediatrics, Frank Porter Graham Child Development Center; and the Center for Environmental Medicine, University of North Carolina School of Medicine; Chapel Hill, N.C. Address reprint requests to Dr. Carson at the Department of Pediatrics, Infectious Disease Division, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC 27514.

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