Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Editors' preface
- PART I PHYSIOLOGY
- PART II METHODOLOGY
- PART III PATHOLOGY
- 34 Hereditary thrombocytopenias
- 35 Thrombocytopenias due to bone marrow disorders
- 36 Immune-mediated thrombocytopenia
- 37 Thrombocytopenia in childhood
- 38 Alloimmune thrombocytopenia
- 39 Drug-induced and drug-dependent immune thrombocytopenias
- 40 Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and hemolytic uremic syndrome
- 41 Thrombocytosis and thrombocythemia
- 42 Platelet adhesive protein defect disorders
- 43 Congenital disorders of platelet secretion
- 44 Congenital platelet signal transduction defects
- 45 Acquired platelet function defects
- 46 Platelet storage and transfusion
- 47 Pathophysiology of arterial thrombosis
- 48 Platelets and atherosclerosis
- 49 Platelet involvement in venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism
- 50 Gene regulation of platelet function
- 51 Platelets and bacterial infections
- 52 Interactions of viruses and platelets and the inactivation of viruses in platelet concentrates prepared for transfusion
- 53 Platelets and parasites
- 54 Platelets and tumours
- 55 Platelets and renal diseases
- 56 Platelets and allergic diseases
- 57 Platelet interactions with other cells related to inflammatory diseases
- 58 Platelets and the preimplantation stage of embryo development
- 59 Platelets in psychiatric and neurological disorders
- 60 Platelets in inflammatory bowel disease
- PART IV PHARMOLOGY
- PART V THERAPY
- Afterword: Platelets: a personal story
- Index
- Plate section
56 - Platelets and allergic diseases
from PART III - PATHOLOGY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Editors' preface
- PART I PHYSIOLOGY
- PART II METHODOLOGY
- PART III PATHOLOGY
- 34 Hereditary thrombocytopenias
- 35 Thrombocytopenias due to bone marrow disorders
- 36 Immune-mediated thrombocytopenia
- 37 Thrombocytopenia in childhood
- 38 Alloimmune thrombocytopenia
- 39 Drug-induced and drug-dependent immune thrombocytopenias
- 40 Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and hemolytic uremic syndrome
- 41 Thrombocytosis and thrombocythemia
- 42 Platelet adhesive protein defect disorders
- 43 Congenital disorders of platelet secretion
- 44 Congenital platelet signal transduction defects
- 45 Acquired platelet function defects
- 46 Platelet storage and transfusion
- 47 Pathophysiology of arterial thrombosis
- 48 Platelets and atherosclerosis
- 49 Platelet involvement in venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism
- 50 Gene regulation of platelet function
- 51 Platelets and bacterial infections
- 52 Interactions of viruses and platelets and the inactivation of viruses in platelet concentrates prepared for transfusion
- 53 Platelets and parasites
- 54 Platelets and tumours
- 55 Platelets and renal diseases
- 56 Platelets and allergic diseases
- 57 Platelet interactions with other cells related to inflammatory diseases
- 58 Platelets and the preimplantation stage of embryo development
- 59 Platelets in psychiatric and neurological disorders
- 60 Platelets in inflammatory bowel disease
- PART IV PHARMOLOGY
- PART V THERAPY
- Afterword: Platelets: a personal story
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Introduction
Irrefutable clinical evidence exists demonstrating the involvement of platelets in allergic diseases, including asthma, allergic rhinitis and eczema. Experimental models of allergic disease suggest that platelets may play a fundamental role in the pathogenesis of the inflammatory response that follows exposure to allergens. Of importance are the observations that, despite being anucleate, platelets share many characteristics of inflammatory cells and, of particular interest in allergy, undergo chemotaxis, express adhesion molecules, release a wide variety of proinflammatory mediators, enzymes, cationic proteins, and themselves become activated by mediators released by other cell types involved in inflammation.
Clinical evidence of platelet involvement in allergic diseases
Numerous studies have revealed an alteration in the character and function of platelets from patients with allergic diseases, and these alterations may be dissociated from the well-characterized involvement of platelets in thrombosis and hemostasis, illustrating a dichotomy in platelet function (Fig. 56.1). Evidence is manifested as heightened platelet activation in vivo, whilst platelets from the same allergic patients are found to be refractory to a variety of stimuli ex vivo, a phenomenon possibly resulting from platelet ‘exhaustion’, where platelets are over stimulated in vivo and subsequently respond poorly to stimuli in vitro. In support of this concept, platelet aggregation has been observed to be abnormal in asthmatic patients. The ability of proaggregatory mediators such as noradrenaline and adenosine diphosphate (ADP) to induce aggregation is seen to be impaired, with no second phase aggregation, an occurrence that has also been correlated with increased serum immunoglubulin E (IgE) in asthmatic patients.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Platelets in Thrombotic and Non-Thrombotic DisordersPathophysiology, Pharmacology and Therapeutics, pp. 852 - 868Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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