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The lungs of young smokers and controls of comparable age from a population of sudden non-hospital deaths were systematically studied to determine the relation between cigarette smoking and pathologic changes in peripheral airways. The characteristic lesion observed was a respiratory bronchiolitis associated with clusters of pigmented alveolar macrophages and was present in the lungs of all smokers studied but rarely seen in nonsmokers (p<0.002). The lungs of smokers also showed small but significant increases in mural inflammatory cells and denuded epithelium in the membranous bronchioles as compared to controls (p<0.05). We postulate that this respiratory bronchiolitis is a precursor of centriacinar emphysema and may be responsible for the subtle functional abnormalities observed in young smokers. (N Engl J Med 291: 755–758, 1974)
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Dennis E. Niewoehner
Jerome Kleinerman
Donald B. Rice
New England Journal of Medicine
Case Western Reserve University
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Niewoehner et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a01be9f1adb974501caf509 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197410102911503
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