By Duke Medicine News and Communications
DURHAM, N.C. – Researchers at Duke University Medical Center
appear to have solved at least a piece of a puzzle that has
mystified physicians for years: why so many patients with
asthma also suffer from GERD, or gastroesophageal reflux
disease.
Clinicians first noted a relationship between the two
diseases in the mid-1970s. Since then, studies have shown that
anywhere from 50 to 90 percent of patients with asthma
experience some aspect of GERD. But can GERD cause asthma, or,
is it the other way around? Perhaps there is some shared
mechanism at the root of both disorders causing them to arise
together. Physicians could make a case for each scenario, but
until now, the exact nature of the relationship was not
clear.
Working in laboratory experiments with mice, Dr. Shu Lin, an
assistant professor of surgery and immunology at Duke,
discovered that inhaling tiny amounts of stomach fluid that
back up into the esophagus – a hallmark of GERD – produces
changes in the immune system that can drive the development of
asthma.
In the experiments, researchers inserted miniscule amounts
of gastric fluid into the lungs of mice (mimicking the human
process of micro-aspiration, or breathing in tiny amounts) over
a period of eight weeks. They compared these animals' immune
systems with those of mice that were exposed to allergens but
not the gastric fluid.
The immune systems of the two sets of mice responded very
differently. Those that had the gastric fluid in their lungs
developed what researchers call a T-helper type 2 response, a
type of immune system reaction characteristic of asthma. The
other mice responded in a more balanced manner, mounting an
immune reaction consisting of both T-helper type 1 and T-helper
type 2 responses.
"This is the first experimental evidence in a controlled,
laboratory setting linking these two very common conditions in
humans," says Lin, the senior author of the study published
online in the European Journal of Clinical Investigation.
"These data suggest that chronic micro-aspiration of gastric
fluid can drive the immune system toward an asthmatic
response."
"This does not mean that everyone with GERD is going to
develop asthma, by any means," says William Parker, an
assistant professor of surgery at Duke and a co-author of the
study. "But it may mean that people with GERD may be more
likely to develop asthma. If there is an upside to this, it is
that developing GERD is something we can pretty much treat and
control."
Parker says poor diet, a lack of exercise and obesity all
contribute to the development of GERD, and that rising rates of
reflux disease are part of a "perfect storm" of environmental
and behavioral factors driving escalating rates of asthma,
particularly in Western cultures. "People should avoid the risk
factors for GERD. We strongly believe that the rise in asthma,
particularly among adults in the country, is in large measure
due to lifestyle choices that can be changed."
Lin and Parker agree that much more work needs to be done to
fully understand the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved
in the relationship between reflux disease and asthma, but both
feel their study offers new directions for developing
additional treatment options for both problems.
Lin says patients who already have GERD can minimize gastric
reflux – and thereby lessen their chances of developing asthma
– by following a few simple guidelines: Eat smaller meals and
eat several hours before going to bed; raise the head of the
bed a few inches; maintain a healthy weight; and limit fatty
goods, coffee, tea, caffeine and alcohol – they can relax the
esophageal sphincter and make reflux more likely.
Funding for the study came from the Society of American
Gastrointestinal Endoscopic Surgeons Research Grant and the
Parks Protocol Memorial Fund.
Additional co-authors from Duke include lead author Andrew
Barbas, Tacy Downing, Keki Balsara, Hung-Enn Tan, Gregory
Rubinstein, Zoie Holzknecht, Bradley Collins and R. Duane
Davis.
A video of Dr. William Parker explaining the link between
GERD and asthma can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJKVtwec08s