[HTML][HTML] Infectious disease, the innate immune response, and fibrosis

A Meneghin, CM Hogaboam - The Journal of clinical …, 2007 - Am Soc Clin Investig
A Meneghin, CM Hogaboam
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2007Am Soc Clin Investig
The unrelenting and destructive progression of most fibrotic responses in the pulmonary,
cardiovascular, integumentary, and alimentary systems remains a major medical challenge
for which therapies are desperately needed. The pathophysiology of fibrosis remains an
enigma, but considerable research and debate surrounds the question of whether chronic
inflammation is the key driver of unrestrained wound healing (ie, the fibrotic response) in
these and other organ systems. This Review describes how infectious pathogens, chronic …
The unrelenting and destructive progression of most fibrotic responses in the pulmonary, cardiovascular, integumentary, and alimentary systems remains a major medical challenge for which therapies are desperately needed. The pathophysiology of fibrosis remains an enigma, but considerable research and debate surrounds the question of whether chronic inflammation is the key driver of unrestrained wound healing (i.e., the fibrotic response) in these and other organ systems. This Review describes how infectious pathogens, chronic inflammation, and unrestrained fibroproliferation are likely to be part of a dynamic, unrelenting process propelling human fibrotic diseases.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation