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Airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries

BACKGROUND: Our prior work on congenital heart disease (CHD) with heterotaxy, a birth defect involving randomized left-right patterning, has shown an association of a high prevalence of airway ciliary dysfunction (CD; 18/43 or 42%) with increased respiratory symptoms. Furthermore, heterotaxy patient...

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Autores principales: Zahid, Maliha, Bais, Abha, Tian, Xin, Devine, William, Lee, Dong Ming, Yau, Cyrus, Sonnenberg, Daniel, Beerman, Lee, Khalifa, Omar, Lo, Cecilia W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5812576/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29444099
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0191605
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author Zahid, Maliha
Bais, Abha
Tian, Xin
Devine, William
Lee, Dong Ming
Yau, Cyrus
Sonnenberg, Daniel
Beerman, Lee
Khalifa, Omar
Lo, Cecilia W.
author_facet Zahid, Maliha
Bais, Abha
Tian, Xin
Devine, William
Lee, Dong Ming
Yau, Cyrus
Sonnenberg, Daniel
Beerman, Lee
Khalifa, Omar
Lo, Cecilia W.
author_sort Zahid, Maliha
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Our prior work on congenital heart disease (CHD) with heterotaxy, a birth defect involving randomized left-right patterning, has shown an association of a high prevalence of airway ciliary dysfunction (CD; 18/43 or 42%) with increased respiratory symptoms. Furthermore, heterotaxy patients with ciliary dysfunction were shown to have more postsurgical pulmonary morbidities. These findings are likely a reflection of the common role of motile cilia in both airway clearance and left-right patterning. As CHD comprising transposition of the great arteries (TGA) is commonly thought to involve disturbance of left-right patterning, especially L-TGA with left-right ventricular inversion, we hypothesize CHD patients with transposition of great arteries (TGA) may have high prevalence of airway CD with increased respiratory symptoms. METHODS AND RESULTS: We recruited 75 CHD patients with isolated TGA, 28% L and 72% D-TGA. Patients were assessed using two tests typically used for evaluating airway ciliary dysfunction in patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a recessive sinopulmonary disease caused by respiratory ciliary dysfunction. This entailed the measurement of nasal nitric oxide (nNO), which is typically low with PCD. We also obtained nasal scrapes and conducted videomicroscopy to assess respiratory ciliary motion (CM). We observed low nNO in 29% of the patients, and abnormal CM in 57%, with 22% showing both low nNO and abnormal CM. No difference was observed for the prevalence of either low nNO or abnormal ciliary motion between patients with D vs. L-TGA. Respiratory symptoms were increased with abnormal CM, but not low nNO. Sequencing analysis showed no compound heterozygous or homozygous mutations in 39 genes known to cause PCD, nor in CFTR, gene causing cystic fibrosis. As both are recessive disorders, these results indicate TGA patients with ciliary dysfunction do not have PCD or cystic fibrosis (which can cause low nNO or abnormal ciliary motion). CONCLUSIONS: TGA patients have high prevalence of abnormal CM and low nNO, but ciliary dysfunction was not correlated with TGA type. Differing from PCD, respiratory symptoms were increased with abnormal CM, but not low nNO. Together with the negative findings from exome sequencing analysis, this would suggest TGA patients with ciliary dysfunction do not have PCD but nevertheless may suffer from milder airway clearance deficiency. Further studies are needed to investigate whether such ciliary dysfunction is associated with increased postsurgical complications as previously observed in CHD patients with heterotaxy.
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spelling pubmed-58125762018-02-28 Airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries Zahid, Maliha Bais, Abha Tian, Xin Devine, William Lee, Dong Ming Yau, Cyrus Sonnenberg, Daniel Beerman, Lee Khalifa, Omar Lo, Cecilia W. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Our prior work on congenital heart disease (CHD) with heterotaxy, a birth defect involving randomized left-right patterning, has shown an association of a high prevalence of airway ciliary dysfunction (CD; 18/43 or 42%) with increased respiratory symptoms. Furthermore, heterotaxy patients with ciliary dysfunction were shown to have more postsurgical pulmonary morbidities. These findings are likely a reflection of the common role of motile cilia in both airway clearance and left-right patterning. As CHD comprising transposition of the great arteries (TGA) is commonly thought to involve disturbance of left-right patterning, especially L-TGA with left-right ventricular inversion, we hypothesize CHD patients with transposition of great arteries (TGA) may have high prevalence of airway CD with increased respiratory symptoms. METHODS AND RESULTS: We recruited 75 CHD patients with isolated TGA, 28% L and 72% D-TGA. Patients were assessed using two tests typically used for evaluating airway ciliary dysfunction in patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a recessive sinopulmonary disease caused by respiratory ciliary dysfunction. This entailed the measurement of nasal nitric oxide (nNO), which is typically low with PCD. We also obtained nasal scrapes and conducted videomicroscopy to assess respiratory ciliary motion (CM). We observed low nNO in 29% of the patients, and abnormal CM in 57%, with 22% showing both low nNO and abnormal CM. No difference was observed for the prevalence of either low nNO or abnormal ciliary motion between patients with D vs. L-TGA. Respiratory symptoms were increased with abnormal CM, but not low nNO. Sequencing analysis showed no compound heterozygous or homozygous mutations in 39 genes known to cause PCD, nor in CFTR, gene causing cystic fibrosis. As both are recessive disorders, these results indicate TGA patients with ciliary dysfunction do not have PCD or cystic fibrosis (which can cause low nNO or abnormal ciliary motion). CONCLUSIONS: TGA patients have high prevalence of abnormal CM and low nNO, but ciliary dysfunction was not correlated with TGA type. Differing from PCD, respiratory symptoms were increased with abnormal CM, but not low nNO. Together with the negative findings from exome sequencing analysis, this would suggest TGA patients with ciliary dysfunction do not have PCD but nevertheless may suffer from milder airway clearance deficiency. Further studies are needed to investigate whether such ciliary dysfunction is associated with increased postsurgical complications as previously observed in CHD patients with heterotaxy. Public Library of Science 2018-02-14 /pmc/articles/PMC5812576/ /pubmed/29444099 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0191605 Text en © 2018 Zahid et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zahid, Maliha
Bais, Abha
Tian, Xin
Devine, William
Lee, Dong Ming
Yau, Cyrus
Sonnenberg, Daniel
Beerman, Lee
Khalifa, Omar
Lo, Cecilia W.
Airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries
title Airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries
title_full Airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries
title_fullStr Airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries
title_full_unstemmed Airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries
title_short Airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries
title_sort airway ciliary dysfunction and respiratory symptoms in patients with transposition of the great arteries
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5812576/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29444099
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0191605
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