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In the 1950s and 1960s, according to a theory known as the British hypothesis, repeated airway infection and hypersecretion of mucus were thought to be the causes of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Subsequently, exposure to tobacco smoke was identified as the predominant cause. Researchers were still unable to relate the frequency of exacerbations — acute increases in the respiratory symptoms of COPD that require medical intervention — and hypersecretion of mucus to the progression of airflow obstruction.1 Instead, the frequency of bacterial isolation from sputum was found to be similar in stable COPD and during exacerbations. On the basis
Exacerbations
Bacteria as a Cause of Exacerbations
Viruses as a Cause of Exacerbations
Interaction of Viruses and Bacteria
Chronic Infection in COPD
Bacterial Colonization and Inflammation
Other Evidence of Chronic Infection
Other Chronic Infections
Mechanisms of Chronic Infection in COPD
Innate Lung Defense
The Vicious Circle
Antibiotics in COPD
Future Directions
Source Information
From the Divisions of Pulmonary and Critical Medicine (S.S.) and the Division of Infectious Diseases (T.F.M.), Department of Medicine, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo; and the Department of Veterans Affairs Western New York Healthcare System, Buffalo (S.S., T.F.M.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Sethi at Veterans Affairs Western New York Healthcare System (151), 3495 Bailey Ave., Buffalo, NY 14215, or at ssethi@buffalo.edu.
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