Weighing the Options: New Insights and Ongoing Challenges in Asthma With Obesity.

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2025-01

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10.1016/j.chest.2024.11.003

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McCravy, Matthew S, Jennifer L Ingram and Loretta G Que (2025). Weighing the Options: New Insights and Ongoing Challenges in Asthma With Obesity. Chest, 167(1). pp. 1–2. 10.1016/j.chest.2024.11.003 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/32531.

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Scholars@Duke

McCravy

Matthew Scott McCravy

Medical Instructor in the Department of Medicine
Ingram

Jennifer Leigh Ingram

Associate Professor in Medicine

Dr. Ingram's research interests focus on the study of airway remodeling in human asthma. Proliferation, migration, and invasion of airway fibroblasts are key features of airway remodeling that contribute to diminished lung function over time. Dr. Ingram uses molecular biology approaches to define the effects of interleukin-13 (IL-13), a cytokine abundantly produced in the asthmatic airway, in the human airway fibroblast. She has identified important regulatory functions of several proteins prevalent in asthma that control fibroblast growth and pro-fibrotic growth factor production in response to IL-13. By understanding these pathways and their role in human asthma and the chronic effects of airway remodeling, novel treatment strategies may be developed.

Que

Loretta Georgina Que

Professor of Medicine

My research interests focus on studying the role of nitric oxide and related enzymes in the pathogenesis of lung disease, specifically that caused by nitrosative/oxidative stress. Proposed studies are performed in cell culture and applied to animal models of disease, then examined in human disease where relevant. It is our hope that by better understanding the role of NO and reactive nitrogen species in mediating inflammation, and regulating cell signaling, that we will not only help to unravel the basic mechanisms of NO related lung disease, but also provide a rationale for targeted therapeutic use of NO.


Key words: nitrosative defense, lung injury, nitric oxide


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