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1 which is filled with a dense and protective mucus plug.
2 al ascension across a dysfunctional cervical mucus plug.
3 topathology, obstructions were identified as mucus plugs.
4 helial biology that produce MUC5AC-dominated mucus plugs.
5 t intercrypt crevices, and absence of apical mucus plugs.
6 participants (37%) in the discovery set had mucus plugs.
7 goblet cells, circumscribed MUC5AC-dominated mucus plugs.
8 nt steroid sensitivity pathways and decrease mucus plugging.
9 itive T2-inflammation associated with severe mucus plugging.
10 from airway inflammation, bronchospasm, and mucus plugging.
11 c target for airway diseases associated with mucus plugging.
12 nce in mice with AAD, resulting in increased mucus plugging.
13 e of barotrauma, hemodynamic instability, or mucus plugging.
14 AHR reversal is directly related to reduced mucus plugging.
15 a T2-driven proximalization associated with mucus plugging.
16 on of pathologic mucus which leads to airway mucus plugging.
17 ated airways and often airway thickening and mucus plugging.
18 e from uninfected mice with AAD demonstrated mucus plugging after 14 and 21 days of ovalbumin-aerosol
19 ntly type 2 airway immune responses and with mucus plugging, air trapping, and airway remodeling.
20 sputum MUC5AC expression and high scores for mucus plugging, air trapping, and other measures of airw
21 ing micro-CT and matched histology to assess mucus plugs, airway wall remodelling and mucus compositi
24 aluation of lung sections revealed extensive mucus plugging and epithelial cell hypertrophy/hyperplas
25 e (COPD); however, the association of airway mucus plugging and mortality in patients with COPD is un
26 gether with decreases in pulmonary function, mucus plugging and oxygen consumption by host neutrophil
27 of airway hyperresponsiveness and to assess mucus plugging and remodelling as wall thickening with i
29 alities in lung morphology, including airway mucus plugging and wall thickening, in adolescent and ad
30 in Results: Among 400 smokers, 229 (57%) had mucus plugs and 207 (52%) had emphysema, and subgroups c
31 of airway remodeling and contributes to the mucus plugs and airflow obstruction associated with seve
34 bjectives: To relate image-based measures of mucus plugs and emphysema to measures of airflow obstruc
37 ll as MRI-defined airway wall abnormalities, mucus plugging, and abnormal lung perfusion in infants a
38 on have been shown to improve lung function, mucus plugging, and airway structural changes that can e
40 MUC5AC is the secretory mucin implicated in mucus plugging, and MUC5AC gene expression has been asso
41 ed bronchial wall thickening/bronchiectasis, mucus plugging, and perfusion deficits from the first ye
43 flecting decreased formation of asphyxiating mucus plugs; and 3) in Scnn1b-Tg mice, neutrophilia, muc
46 Conclusions: Computed tomography-detected mucus plugs are associated with an increased risk for fu
49 < 0.001).Conclusions: Symptomatically silent mucus plugs are highly prevalent in smokers and independ
50 of disease heterogeneity, including regional mucus plugging associated with abnormal lung perfusion i
53 ace enlargement, but had no effect on airway mucus plugging, bacterial infection, or pulmonary mortal
57 erized by lung eosinophilia, remodeling, and mucus plugging, controlled by adaptive Th2 effector cell
64 ssion patterns are linked to the presence of mucus plugs, highlighting biological pathways involved i
65 ng based on the number of lung segments with mucus plugs identified on chest computed tomography scan
67 c variations that may underlie propensity to mucus plugging in asthma and could be important in targe
70 95% CI, 50.7%-57.4%) in participants who had mucus plugs in 0, 1 to 2, and 3 or more lung segments, r
71 53 (21.8%), and 825 (18.9%) participants had mucus plugs in 0, 1 to 2, and 3 or more lung segments, r
74 r luminal O(2), airway epithelia surrounding mucus plugs in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (CO
77 airflow over time supports a causal role for mucus plugs in mechanisms of airflow obstruction in asth
79 , accidental extubation, desaturation and/or mucus plugging/inhalation, hypotension and/or arrhythmia
80 foreign bodies, virus infection, tumors, or mucus plugs intrinsic to airway disease, including cysti
81 ary lesions (k = 1.00), effusion (k = 0.64), mucus plug (k = 0.68), and solid scattered nodularity (k
82 hyperpolarized helium 3 MRI, suggesting that mucus plugging may be an important cause of ventilation
83 electasis/consolidation, BE with and without mucus plugging (MP), airway wall thickening, MP, ground-
84 ever, some features are different, including mucus plugging, mucus "tethering" to goblet cells, plasm
87 tent asthma phenotype, and susceptibility to mucus plugs occurs at the subject and the bronchopulmona
89 t represent a protective strategy to prevent mucus plugging of distal airways and thus impaired venti
90 f partially dispersed Paneth granules in the mucus plugs of CF mouse intestinal crypts, and this mucu
92 Objective: To examine associations between mucus plugs on chest computed tomography (CT) and future
94 n alone is not sufficient to trigger luminal mucus plugging or airways inflammation/goblet cell hyper
96 ter the overall permeability of the cervical mucus plug, our findings suggest that the latter mechani
97 ersistent asthma phenotype and if changes in mucus plugs over time associate with changes in lung fun
98 secretion, which formed a thick, protective mucus plug overlying the surface epithelium, entrapping
99 radiographic infiltrates, coughing up thick mucus plugs, peripheral and pulmonary eosinophilia, and
103 icted FEV(1), and FVC stratified by baseline mucus plug score (high/low defined by score >=4/0-3.5, r
107 Fewer dupilumab-receiving patients had high mucus plug score at Week 24 than at baseline (32.8% vs 6
111 sults: In 164 participants, the mean (range) mucus plug score was similar at baseline and Year 3 (3.4
113 moderate-to-severe asthma with high baseline mucus plug score, and increased the likelihood of achiev
114 nadjusted and adjusted relationships between mucus plug score, emphysema percentage, and lung functio
118 likely to achieve FeNO <25 ppb in high-/low-mucus-plug score subgroups (odds ratio: 6.64; P = 0.003/
119 e To assess regional associations between CT mucus plugs scored by individual bronchopulmonary segmen
122 SARP-3 participants, radiologists generated mucus plug scores to assess mucus plug persistence over
125 mental VDP of 18.9% (95% CI: 15.7, 22.2) for mucus-plugged segments versus 5.1% (95% CI: 3.3, 7.0) fo
126 reduced the airway eosinophil infiltration, mucus plugging, smooth muscle hyperplasia, and subepithe
127 segments with AT more frequently had airway mucus plugging than lung segments without AT (48% vs. 18
130 In participants with COPD, the presence of mucus plugs that obstructed medium- to large-sized airwa
135 out mucus plugs, the presence of 1-2 and >=3 mucus plugs was associated with increased risk (adjusted
137 ltiple types of obstruction characterized as mucus plugs were identified in smokers with emphysema an
140 severe in those with airway eosinophilia and mucus plugging, whereas those who are obese have less se
141 from airway epithelial cells and subsequent mucus plugging, which serves as the focus for infections
142 from airway epithelial cells and subsequent mucus plugging, which serves as the focus for infections
143 nd 21% of transitional bronchioles contained mucus plugs, with a high coefficient of variation in the
144 ue to the resolution of CT, it is unknown if mucus plugs within the distal small airways (<2mm in dia