Volume 31, Issue 1 297591 pp. 1-7
Article
Open Access

Putative Roles of Circulating Resistin in Patients with Asthma, COPD and Cigarette Smokers

Sana S. Al Mutairi

Corresponding Author

Sana S. Al Mutairi

Department of Medicine Faculty of Medicine Kuwait University Safat, Kuwait , kuniv.edu

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Olusegun A. Mojiminiyi

Olusegun A. Mojiminiyi

Department of Pathology Faculty of Medicine Kuwait University Safat, Kuwait , kuniv.edu

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Aida Shihab-Eldeen

Aida Shihab-Eldeen

Department of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine Kuwait University Safat, Kuwait , kuniv.edu

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Tahani Al Rammah

Tahani Al Rammah

Department of Pathology Faculty of Medicine Kuwait University Safat, Kuwait , kuniv.edu

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Nabila Abdella

Nabila Abdella

Department of Medicine Faculty of Medicine Kuwait University Safat, Kuwait , kuniv.edu

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First published: 28 May 2013
Citations: 1

Abstract

Aims: To investigate the hypothesis that circulating resistin reflects the degree of pulmonary inflammation, this study explores putative roles of resistin in patients with acute and stable inflammatory obstructive airway diseases and cigarette smokers.

Methods: We determined complements C3, C4, fasting resistin, insulin, glucose and lipid profile; calculated insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment (HOMA-IR) in patients with acute asthma exacerbation (n = 34); stable asthma (n = 26) and stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD; n = 26), cigarette smokers (n = 81), and healthy control subjects (n = 42). We determined the associations between these variables and pulmonary function tests.

Results: Patients with COPD, acute and stable asthma had significantly higher resistin and insulin than control subjects. Resistin, insulin, HOMA-IR, FEV1% and FEV1/FVC were significantly (p < 0.05) different between patients with acute asthma compared with stable asthma and COPD; smokers had similar levels of resistin, C3 and C4 as patients with asthma and COPD. In smokers, patientswith asthma or COPD, resistin showed significant inverse correlations with FEV1%; FEV1/FVC% and positive significant correlations with BMI and HOMA-IR. Logistic regression showed that resistin is associated (p < 0.05) with inflammatory obstructive airways disease − odds ratio (OR) = 1.22 and smoking OR = 1.18.

Conclusion: Resistin may be a disease activity marker and may contribute to insulin resistance in smokers, asthma and COPD.

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