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Collagen Scaffolding During Development and Its Deformation With Chronic Lung Disease

117

Citations

28

References

2003

Year

Abstract

Parenchymal collagen increases throughout development. Before 30 weeks, there is a delicate complex interstitial collagen network, which may be important for primary septation and subsequent normal development. Positive pressure ventilation, if excessive, and depending on lung maturity and disease state, over a short time can severely compress the interstitium and damage this collagen network and prevent normal primary septation and arrest or distort future lung development. With severe CLD, distal air space diameter increases. There is a failure of primary and secondary septation, arrested lung development and remodeling, with thickened cnt and remodeling, with thickened collagenous saccular walls, and a wide interstitium with increased quantity and size of collagen fibers that can affect the mechanics of ventilation. We conclude that normal lung development is dependent on a normal interstitium and, perhaps, collagen architecture and that origins of CLD begin early in the course of positive pressure ventilation.

References

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