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Lauri A. Laitinen

Other affiliations: University of Helsinki
Bio: Lauri A. Laitinen is an academic researcher from Helsinki University Central Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Asthma & Chronic bronchitis. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 106 publications receiving 9944 citations. Previous affiliations of Lauri A. Laitinen include University of Helsinki.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured bronchial reactivity to inhaled histamine and prepared electron micrographs from 8 asthmatic patients who never smoked (2 females, 6 males, 18 to 62 yr of age).
Abstract: We measured bronchial reactivity to inhaled histamine and prepared electron micrographs from bronchial biopsies from 8 asthmatic patients who never smoked (2 females, 6 males, 18 to 62 yr of age). Judging from their clinical histories and the need for medication and long-term follow-up of PEF values, 2 of them had mild asthma, 3 moderately severe, and 3 severe asthma. They had not experienced respiratory infections for at least 2 months prior to the study. The result, obtained from the cumulative dose-response curve, was expressed as the provocative dose (PD20) of histamine producing a 20% fall in forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1). In 5 patients, the PD20 varied from 0.049 mg to 2.234 mg. In the sixth patient, only PD15 could be measured (5.187 mg). In 2 patients, the low initial FEV1 values, because of severe, partly irreversible obstruction, prevented the measurement of bronchial reactivity. Bronchial biopsies were taken with rigid tube bronchoscopy from 3 levels: (1) at the carina of the right upper lobe, (2) at the opening of the right middle or lower lobe, and (3) inside the right lower lobe. The specimens were prepared for both light and electron microscopy. Fresh biopsies showed that asthma patients can have epithelial destruction at all levels of the airways. The ciliated cells appeared to be the most destroyed cell type in the epithelium. Intraepithelial nerves and mast cells were seen. Epithelial destruction in the respiratory tract of the asthma patients with mild to severe bronchial hyperresponsiveness was prominent enough to expose the epithelial nerves for specific or nonspecific stimuli.

1,204 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A double-blind, placebo-controlled study evaluated the effect of the inhaled glucocorticoid budesonide in subjects with mild COPD who continued smoking and found that the FEV1 improved at the rate of 17 ml per year in the budesonid group, which was higher than the predicted value.
Abstract: Background and Methods Although patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) should stop smoking, some do not. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study, we evaluated the effect of the inhaled glucocorticoid budesonide in subjects with mild COPD who continued smoking. After a six-month run-in period, we randomly assigned 1277 subjects (mean age, 52 years; mean forced expiratory volume in one second [FEV1], 77 percent of the predicted value; 73 percent men) to twice-daily treatment with 400 μg of budesonide or placebo, inhaled from a dry-powder inhaler, for three years. Results Of the 1277 subjects, 912 (71 percent) completed the study. Among these subjects, the median decline in the FEV1 after the use of a bronchodilator over the three-year period was 140 ml in the budesonide group and 180 ml in the placebo group (P=0.05), or 4.3 percent and 5.3 percent of the predicted value, respectively. During the first six months of the study, the FEV1 improved at the rate of 17 ml per year in the bud...

980 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Antiinflammatory therapy with inhaled budesonide is an effective first-line treatment for patients with newly detected, mild asthma, and it is superior to the use of terbutaline in such patients.
Abstract: Background. The presence of airway inflammation even in mild asthma points to the potential value of antiinflammatory therapy. We compared the effect of an inhaled corticosteroid, budesonide, with that of an inhaled β2-agonist, terbutaline, in the long-term treatment of newly detected asthma. Methods. We studied 103 patients (29 male and 74 female patients 15 to 64 years old) in whom asthma had appeared within the previous year. The patients were randomly assigned in blinded fashion to two treatment groups: one to receive 600 μg of inhaled budesonide twice a day, and the other to receive 375 μg of inhaled terbutaline twice a day. The study period was two years. Results. After six weeks of treatment, the patients treated with budesonide tolerated inhaled histamine better than the patients treated with terbutaline (a difference of one doubling dose step, P<0.001), and the difference was sustained. Patients' diaries kept during the first three months of the study and during the last month of the fir...

799 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that, in asthma, an airway inflammatory process is present even at a clinically early stage of the disease, and there are signs of a general inflammatory response caused by more than one cell type.
Abstract: We have studied bronchial biopsies from 14 patients with newly diagnosed asthma (four men and 10 women), who had had asthma symptoms, on average, 74 months (range, 2 to 12 months) and from four control subjects The patients had not received corticosteroids, disodium cromoglycate, or theophylline before the study The bronchial biopsies were taken, using a rigid-tube bronchoscope under local anaesthesia, from two different airway levels: (1) inside the right upper lobe bronchus, and (2) at the opening of the right middle lobe The specimens were prepared for both light and electron microscopy The use of Slot grids 1 x 2 mm enabled a large area of the thin sections to be photographed and analyzed by applying a graphic Autocad program There was an increase in the numbers of mast cells (p < 0001), eosinophils (p < 005), lymphocytes (p < 005), and macrophages (p < 005) in the epithelium of patients with newly diagnosed asthma as compared with those in control subjects In the lamina propria, these asthmatic patients had more eosinophils (p < 0001), lymphocytes (p < 0001), macrophages (p < 0001), and plasma cells (p < 0001) than did the control subjects We conclude that, in asthma, an airway inflammatory process is present even at a clinically early stage of the disease In the asthmatic airways, there are signs of a general inflammatory response caused by more than one cell type

541 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Apr 2004-Science
TL;DR: In three cohorts from Finland and Canada, single nucleotide polymorphism–tagged haplotypes associated with high serum immunoglobulin E or asthma or asthma implicate GPRA in the pathogenesis of atopy and asthma.
Abstract: Susceptibility to asthma depends on variation at an unknown number of genetic loci. To identify susceptibility genes on chromosome 7p, we adopted a hierarchical genotyping design, leading to the identification of a 133-kilobase risk-conferring segment containing two genes. One of these coded for an orphan G protein-coupled receptor named GPRA (G protein-coupled receptor for asthma susceptibility), which showed distinct distribution of protein isoforms between bronchial biopsies from healthy and asthmatic individuals. In three cohorts from Finland and Canada, single nucleotide polymorphism-tagged haplotypes associated with high serum immunoglobulin E or asthma. The murine ortholog of GPRA was up-regulated in a mouse model of ovalbumin-induced inflammation. Together, these data implicate GPRA in the pathogenesis of atopy and asthma.

456 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: It is recommended that spirometry is required for the clinical diagnosis of COPD to avoid misdiagnosis and to ensure proper evaluation of severity of airflow limitation.
Abstract: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains a major public health problem. It is the fourth leading cause of chronic morbidity and mortality in the United States, and is projected to rank fifth in 2020 in burden of disease worldwide, according to a study published by the World Bank/World Health Organization. Yet, COPD remains relatively unknown or ignored by the public as well as public health and government officials. In 1998, in an effort to bring more attention to COPD, its management, and its prevention, a committed group of scientists encouraged the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the World Health Organization to form the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD). Among the important objectives of GOLD are to increase awareness of COPD and to help the millions of people who suffer from this disease and die prematurely of it or its complications. The first step in the GOLD program was to prepare a consensus report, Global Strategy for the Diagnosis, Management, and Prevention of COPD, published in 2001. The present, newly revised document follows the same format as the original consensus report, but has been updated to reflect the many publications on COPD that have appeared. GOLD national leaders, a network of international experts, have initiated investigations of the causes and prevalence of COPD in their countries, and developed innovative approaches for the dissemination and implementation of COPD management guidelines. We appreciate the enormous amount of work the GOLD national leaders have done on behalf of their patients with COPD. Despite the achievements in the 5 years since the GOLD report was originally published, considerable additional work is ahead of us if we are to control this major public health problem. The GOLD initiative will continue to bring COPD to the attention of governments, public health officials, health care workers, and the general public, but a concerted effort by all involved in health care will be necessary.

17,023 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: List of participants (GOLD Scientific Committee): Nicholas Anthonisen, Winnipeg, Canada, William C. Bailey, Birmingham, US, Tim Clark, London, UK, Leonardo Fabbri, Modena, Italy, Yoshinosuke Fukuchi, Tokyo, Japan; Lawrence Grouse, Seattle, US; James C. Hogg, Vancouver, Canada; Dirkje S. Postma, Groningen, the Netherlands.

5,740 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The main goals of the updated document are to improve the quality of care provided to patients with COPD and to develop the project using a disease-oriented approach.
Abstract: The Standards for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Patients with COPD document 2004 updates the position papers on chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) published by the American Thoracic Society (ATS) and the European Respiratory Society (ERS) in 1995 1, 2. Both societies felt the need to update the previous documents due to the following. 1) The prevalence and overall importance of COPD as a health problem is increasing. 2) There have been enough advances in the field to require an update, especially adapted to the particular needs of the ATS/ERS constituency. 3) It allows for the creation of a “live” modular document based on the web; it should provide healthcare professionals and patients with a user friendly and reliable authoritative source of information. 4) The care of COPD should be comprehensive, is often multidisciplinary and rapidly changing. 5) Both the ATS and the ERS acknowledge the recent dissemination of the Global Initiative of Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) 3 as a major worldwide contribution to the battle against COPD. However, some specific requirements of the members of both societies require adaptation of the broad GOLD initiative. Those requirements include specific recommendations on oxygen therapy, pulmonary rehabilitation, noninvasive ventilation, surgery in and for COPD, sleep, air travel, and end-of-life. In addition, special emphasis has been placed on issues related to the habit of smoking and its control. ### Goals and objectives The main goals of the updated document are to improve the quality of care provided to patients with COPD and to develop the project using a disease-oriented approach. To achieve these goals, both organisations have developed a modular electronic web-based document with two components. 1) A component for health professionals that intends to: raise awareness of COPD; inform on the latest advances in the overall pathogenesis, diagnosis, monitoring and management of COPD; and …

4,312 citations