Nitish Kumar, Tripti Brar, Hirohito Kita, Lisa A. Marks, A. Miglani, Michael J. Marino, D. Lal
{"title":"慢性鼻炎中的病毒:系统综述","authors":"Nitish Kumar, Tripti Brar, Hirohito Kita, Lisa A. Marks, A. Miglani, Michael J. Marino, D. Lal","doi":"10.3389/falgy.2023.1237068","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Unlike acute rhinosinusitis (ARS) which is mostly viral in etiology, the role of viruses in chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) remains unclear. Viruses may play a role in initiation, exacerbations or perpetuate chronic inflammatory responses in the sinonasal mucosa. Research needs to characterize whether viruses are part of the normal sinonasal microbiome, colonizers or pathogenic.Systematic review of the English literature was conducted. Following databases were searched with an initial search conducted in November 2021 and then updated through June 2023: Ovid Medline (1946 to present), Ovid Embase (1988 to present), Scopus (2004 to present) and Web of Science (1975 to present). MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) terms included: viruses, virus diseases, sinusitis, and rhinovirus. Keywords: virus, viral infection*, sinusitis, rhinovirus, chronic rhinosinusitis, CRS, respiratory virus, respiratory infection*, and exacerbat*. A supplementary search was conducted through September 2023: Ovid Medline (1946 to present), Epub Ahead of Print, In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations and Ovid MEDLINE(R) Daily. Keywords used were: virus, viral infection*, sinusitis, chronic rhinosinusitis, CRS, respiratory virus, respiratory infection*, and exacerbat*.Thirty studies on viruses in CRS met inclusion criteria for full review. These included 17 studies on prevalence of virus in CRS, 5 examining probable causes of host susceptibility to viral infections in CRS, and 8 studies examining pathological pathways in viral association of CRS. The prevalence of viruses in nasal specimens of CRS subjects was higher as compared to controls in most studies, though a few studies showed otherwise. Rhinovirus was the most common virus detected. Studies showed that viruses may be associated with persistent hyper-responsiveness in the sinonasal mucosa, susceptibility to bacterial infections, upregulation of genes involved in the immune response and airway remodeling as well as CRS exacerbations. Presence of viruses was also associated with worse symptom severity scores in CRS subjects.Most data show higher presence of viruses in nasal and serum samples of CRS subjects as compared to controls but their exact role in CRS pathophysiology in unclear. Large studies with longitudinal sampling at all disease phases (i.e., prior to disease initiation, during disease initiation, during disease persistence, and during exacerbations) using standardized sampling techniques are needed to definitively elucidate the role of virus in CRS.","PeriodicalId":73062,"journal":{"name":"Frontiers in allergy","volume":"6 6","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Viruses in chronic rhinosinusitis: a systematic review\",\"authors\":\"Nitish Kumar, Tripti Brar, Hirohito Kita, Lisa A. Marks, A. Miglani, Michael J. Marino, D. Lal\",\"doi\":\"10.3389/falgy.2023.1237068\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Unlike acute rhinosinusitis (ARS) which is mostly viral in etiology, the role of viruses in chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) remains unclear. Viruses may play a role in initiation, exacerbations or perpetuate chronic inflammatory responses in the sinonasal mucosa. Research needs to characterize whether viruses are part of the normal sinonasal microbiome, colonizers or pathogenic.Systematic review of the English literature was conducted. Following databases were searched with an initial search conducted in November 2021 and then updated through June 2023: Ovid Medline (1946 to present), Ovid Embase (1988 to present), Scopus (2004 to present) and Web of Science (1975 to present). MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) terms included: viruses, virus diseases, sinusitis, and rhinovirus. Keywords: virus, viral infection*, sinusitis, rhinovirus, chronic rhinosinusitis, CRS, respiratory virus, respiratory infection*, and exacerbat*. A supplementary search was conducted through September 2023: Ovid Medline (1946 to present), Epub Ahead of Print, In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations and Ovid MEDLINE(R) Daily. Keywords used were: virus, viral infection*, sinusitis, chronic rhinosinusitis, CRS, respiratory virus, respiratory infection*, and exacerbat*.Thirty studies on viruses in CRS met inclusion criteria for full review. These included 17 studies on prevalence of virus in CRS, 5 examining probable causes of host susceptibility to viral infections in CRS, and 8 studies examining pathological pathways in viral association of CRS. The prevalence of viruses in nasal specimens of CRS subjects was higher as compared to controls in most studies, though a few studies showed otherwise. Rhinovirus was the most common virus detected. Studies showed that viruses may be associated with persistent hyper-responsiveness in the sinonasal mucosa, susceptibility to bacterial infections, upregulation of genes involved in the immune response and airway remodeling as well as CRS exacerbations. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
不同于急性鼻窦炎(ARS)的病因主要是病毒,病毒在慢性鼻窦炎(CRS)中的作用尚不清楚。病毒可能在鼻窦黏膜慢性炎症反应的起始、加重或延续中起作用。研究需要确定病毒是正常鼻腔微生物群的一部分,是定植者还是致病性的。对英国文献进行了系统的综述。以下数据库在2021年11月进行了首次搜索,然后更新到2023年6月:Ovid Medline(1946年至今),Ovid Embase(1988年至今),Scopus(2004年至今)和Web of Science(1975年至今)。MeSH(医学主题标题)术语包括:病毒、病毒性疾病、鼻窦炎和鼻病毒。关键词:病毒、病毒感染*、鼻窦炎、鼻病毒、慢性鼻窦炎、CRS、呼吸道病毒、呼吸道感染*、加重*补充检索进行到2023年9月:Ovid Medline(1946年至今),Epub Ahead of Print, In-Process & Other非索引引文和Ovid Medline (R) Daily。关键词:病毒、病毒感染*、鼻窦炎、慢性鼻窦炎、CRS、呼吸道病毒、呼吸道感染*、加重*。有30项关于CRS病毒的研究符合完整综述的纳入标准。这些研究包括17项关于CRS病毒流行的研究,5项关于CRS宿主对病毒感染易感性的可能原因的研究,8项关于CRS病毒相关病理途径的研究。在大多数研究中,CRS受试者鼻标本中的病毒流行率高于对照组,尽管少数研究显示相反情况。鼻病毒是检测到的最常见病毒。研究表明,病毒可能与鼻黏膜持续的高反应性、对细菌感染的易感性、参与免疫反应和气道重塑的基因上调以及CRS加重有关。在CRS受试者中,病毒的存在也与较差的症状严重程度评分相关。大多数数据显示,与对照组相比,CRS受试者鼻腔和血清样本中病毒的存在率较高,但其在CRS病理生理中的确切作用尚不清楚。为了明确阐明病毒在CRS中的作用,需要使用标准化采样技术在所有疾病阶段(即疾病开始之前、疾病开始期间、疾病持续期间和恶化期间)进行纵向采样的大型研究。
Viruses in chronic rhinosinusitis: a systematic review
Unlike acute rhinosinusitis (ARS) which is mostly viral in etiology, the role of viruses in chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) remains unclear. Viruses may play a role in initiation, exacerbations or perpetuate chronic inflammatory responses in the sinonasal mucosa. Research needs to characterize whether viruses are part of the normal sinonasal microbiome, colonizers or pathogenic.Systematic review of the English literature was conducted. Following databases were searched with an initial search conducted in November 2021 and then updated through June 2023: Ovid Medline (1946 to present), Ovid Embase (1988 to present), Scopus (2004 to present) and Web of Science (1975 to present). MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) terms included: viruses, virus diseases, sinusitis, and rhinovirus. Keywords: virus, viral infection*, sinusitis, rhinovirus, chronic rhinosinusitis, CRS, respiratory virus, respiratory infection*, and exacerbat*. A supplementary search was conducted through September 2023: Ovid Medline (1946 to present), Epub Ahead of Print, In-Process & Other Non-Indexed Citations and Ovid MEDLINE(R) Daily. Keywords used were: virus, viral infection*, sinusitis, chronic rhinosinusitis, CRS, respiratory virus, respiratory infection*, and exacerbat*.Thirty studies on viruses in CRS met inclusion criteria for full review. These included 17 studies on prevalence of virus in CRS, 5 examining probable causes of host susceptibility to viral infections in CRS, and 8 studies examining pathological pathways in viral association of CRS. The prevalence of viruses in nasal specimens of CRS subjects was higher as compared to controls in most studies, though a few studies showed otherwise. Rhinovirus was the most common virus detected. Studies showed that viruses may be associated with persistent hyper-responsiveness in the sinonasal mucosa, susceptibility to bacterial infections, upregulation of genes involved in the immune response and airway remodeling as well as CRS exacerbations. Presence of viruses was also associated with worse symptom severity scores in CRS subjects.Most data show higher presence of viruses in nasal and serum samples of CRS subjects as compared to controls but their exact role in CRS pathophysiology in unclear. Large studies with longitudinal sampling at all disease phases (i.e., prior to disease initiation, during disease initiation, during disease persistence, and during exacerbations) using standardized sampling techniques are needed to definitively elucidate the role of virus in CRS.