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Voiceover: So the two categories
that we assign to emphysema,
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the centriacinar and the panacinar,
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they're basically referring to geography.
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It's like saying, my city's flooded,
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and is it contained to the
central streets, the main street,
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or is it everywhere?
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So basically, it's asking,
"Where is the emphysema?"
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So a little Latin review, we have "pan,"
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which means everywhere,
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and "centri," so "center."
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Now, what on earth is an "acinar?"
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And basically, that's a
geographical term too,
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and this is an "acinus."
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To orient ourselves, let's draw the lungs.
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We have the trachea here,
and the two big bronchi,
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so you have your lobe of lung
here, and lobe of lung here.
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The bronchi are kind of
like your tree trunks,
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and as they start to branch off like this,
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the smaller airways here
are called "bronchioles,"
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and that's basically the
level we're at right here.
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Here is our bronchiole,
and the rest of this branch
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that I've drawn, is just
the rest of the airway.
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So here, we have our alveoli cluster.
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So there are many many countless branches
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of acini in the lungs, but this
is what one would look like.
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So that tells us centriacinar
versus panacinar,
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we're talking about
where, in this, are we?
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So in this normal acinus that I've drawn,
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you can see the tightly,
little coiled structures here
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in the alveoli, and along the airways too.
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This elastic, coiled shape is possible
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because of our protein, elastin.
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Elastin is cleaved by elastase,
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which is this protein inhibitor,
which is good usually,
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because we want the tissue to turn over,
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old ones to be eaten up.
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And this whole system is
controlled by Alpha 1-antitrypsin,
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which is a compound made
in the liver, and it's job
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is to regulate the amount of elastase.
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So, by inhibiting the elastase,
it inhibits the elastin,
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the antitrypsin lets
there be more elastin.
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So whether we're going to
have centriacinar here,
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or panacinar destruction of elastin,
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fully depends on the pathophysiology
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of why is there so much elastase?
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Why is elastin getting destroyed?
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So first, let's take a
look at centriacinar.
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And this is what it looks like,
so I've draw the same acinus
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that we have up there,
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but because of the lack of elastin in it,
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there're fewer of the walls to begin with.
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And, whatever walls there
are left, it's because
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it's so floppy, that's why
it looks bigger like that,
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it just doesn't hold that nice shape.
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So this is what we call
"centriacinar distribution,"
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as you can see, geographically,
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it's earlier, it's not everywhere.
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Centriacinar is really
related to inflammation,
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which is the first
pathophysiology of emphysema.
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Now inflammation recruits neutrophils,
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these white blood cells
that flight inflammation
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everywhere in the body.
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But when they get to the
lungs, the neutrophils
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make elastase, that's
the whole culprit here.
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So it's too much elastase,
from too much inflammation.
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And the way we'd get that,
most commonly, is from smoking.
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So even though, when you
see somebody smoking,
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and the smoke rising out of there
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looks like just some sort of gas,
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it's actually made of millions
of tiny little particles,
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that enter the lungs.
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They're all foreign,
they're all irritating,
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and the lung acts like a
filter, these smoke particles
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are big enough to get
trapped pretty early on.
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They're not small enough
to get through the filter,
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all the way to the end of the acinus,
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so they kind of stay in this
central acinar distribution,
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which then makes sense,
that central acinar
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is related to smoking,
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and the inflammation you get from that.
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So if you look at the lungs as a whole,
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centriacinar is early on,
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and near the larger-caliber
airways, like the bronchioles.
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Now the next one, panacinar.
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So panacinar is usually
not induced by some sort
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of external factor;
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this problem arises
out of the body itself.
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Here we have Alpha
1-antitrypsin deficiency.
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Remember, we said up there,
this regulates the amount
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of elastase, namely to
tone it down a little bit.
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So without it, the elastase
is really unchecked;
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it just goes nuts, and
eats up all the elastin
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in the tissues, everywhere.
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See this problem
[unintelligible] earlier or later
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in the lungs,
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because it's inherent in all
the tissues of the lungs.
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So everywhere the elastin's
getting chewed up,
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everywhere there's elastic tissue.
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Just as a side note, Alpha 1-antitrypsin
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is made in the liver,
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and in this disease,
when there's deficiency,
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that means something in the DNA,
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and the gene encoding for it,
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there's a mistake.
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So, all the misfolded protein
can't leave the liver,
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leading to liver disease.
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But when we come to the lungs,
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we see panacinar emphysema.