74349

Blood eosinophils and its relation to sputum inflammation and sputum bacterial load in patients with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Article

Last updated: 03 Jan 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

-

Abstract

Background: little is recognized on the role eosinophils in the pathophysiology of acute exacerbation of chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD).
Objective: To assess the relationship between eiosinophilic AECOPD and sputum inflammation and bacterial load.
Methodology: A cross-sectional study was done on 80 out of 189 patients presented by clinical picture of AECOPD.
Spirometry, total and differential leucocytic count (TLC), sputum bacterial load and culture were done for all participants.
They were divided into two subgroups based on blood eosinophils %; eosinophil high AECOPD (≥2%) and eosinophil low
AECOPD (˂ 2%).
Results: Among the studied patients; 51.25% have eosinophilhigh and 48.75% have eosinophil low AECOPD. Patients with
eosinophils high AECOPD had higher age, BMI, smoking status, smoking index, wheezes and FVC%, with more severe COPD and more severe AECOPD (p0.018) than those with eosinophil low AECOPD. In patients with eosinophil high AECOPD the blood TLC/cm3 and neutrophil % were significantly lower, while lymphocyte % and eosinophil /cmm3 were higher significantly than eosinophil low AECOPD (p 0.001 each). Regarding sputum inflammatory cells they had significant increase of sputum lymphocyte % and eosinophil/cm3 and % with significant decrease of sputum neutrophils % (p˂0.05). In eosinophil high AECOPD subgroup the blood eosinophil /cmm3 was positively correlated with age, BMI and smoking index, blood lymphocytes % eosinophils %, sputum lymphocytes % and sputum eosinophils and it was negatively
correlated with blood TLC, blood and sputum neutrophils, FEV1/FVC ratio, FEV1 % FEF25-75 % and FVC%. The sputum
bacterial load was non-significantly lower in eosinophil high than eosinophil low AECOPD (61.0% vs. 74.4%, p=0.20).The
type of the isolated bacteria didn't differ between both AECOPD subgroups (p=0.17).
Conclusion: Eosinophilic AECOPD is common and it was related to airway inflammation and it didn't' affect sputum
bacterial load or type of isolated bacterial species

DOI

10.21608/jram.2020.23857.1038

Keywords

Airway inflammation, eosinophilic AECOPD, sputum eosinophilia, sputum bacterial load

Authors

First Name

Fatma

Last Name

Elsayed

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Ashmoun Chest Hospital, Menoufia, Egypt

Email

fatmatahseen8588@gmail.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

First Name

Magd

Last Name

Galal

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Chest Diseases Department, Faculty of Medicine for Girls, Cairo, Al-Azhar University, Egypt.

Email

mgdgalal@gmail.com

City

Cairo,Egypt

Orcid

-

First Name

Manal

Last Name

Hafez

MiddleName

Refaat

Affiliation

Chest Diseases Department, Faculty of Medicine for Girls, Cairo, Al-Azhar University, Egypt.

Email

dr.manalrefaat@gmail.com

City

Dakahlia

Orcid

0000-0002-7380-3977

First Name

Asmaa

Last Name

Elmadbouly

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Clinical Pathology Department, Faculty of Medicine for Girls, Cairo, Al-Azhar University, Egypt.

Email

asmaaelmadbouly@azhar.com

City

Cairo,Egypt

Orcid

-

Volume

1

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

17217

Issue Date

2020-07-01

Receive Date

2020-02-11

Publish Date

2020-07-01

Page Start

116

Page End

127

Print ISSN

2636-252X

Online ISSN

2636-2538

Link

https://jram.journals.ekb.eg/article_74349.html

Detail API

https://jram.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=74349

Order

9

Type

Original Article

Type Code

676

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Journal of Recent Advances in Medicine

Publication Link

https://jram.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Blood eosinophils and its relation to sputum inflammation and sputum bacterial load in patients with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023