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Dive into the research topics where Wojciech Mędrala is active.

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Featured researches published by Wojciech Mędrala.


Respiratory Medicine | 2011

Pepsin and bile acids in induced sputum of chronic cough patients

Marcin Grabowski; Ahmad Kasran; Sven Seys; Ans Pauwels; Wojciech Mędrala; Lieven Dupont; Bernard Panaszek; Dominique Bullens

One of the theories which explain, why gastroesophageal reflux disease (GORD) may provoke cough, is the occurrence of aspiration of gastric content into the airways. The aim of the study was to assess the presence of aspiration markers: pepsin and bile acids (BA) in induced sputum in gastroesophageal reflux-related (GOR-related) chronic cough (CC) patients. Forty-one CC patients and 20 healthy controls were enrolled in the study. GORD as cause of CC was diagnosed by presence of GORD-related symptoms, gastroscopy and/or improvement of cough upon treatment with proton pump inhibitors (PPI). Patients were divided into two groups based on the response to PPI treatment. In all patients and healthy controls induced sputum was obtained and differential cell counts were calculated. Levels of pepsin and BA were measured in sputum supernatants. Pepsin was detectable in 48.8% samples in CC patients and in 60% healthy controls (pxa0=xa0NS). In pepsin positive samples no significant difference in pepsin concentration could be found between CC patients and control subjects. Pepsin levels in pepsin positive samples were significantly decreased in patients treated with PPI compared to non-treated patients. BA were detectable in 56% samples of CC patients and in 70% healthy controls (pxa0=xa0NS). BA concentration in BA positive samples in CC group was not different from healthy controls. There was also no difference when comparing patients who took PPI and those who did not. Patients characterized as PPI-responders and PPI-non-responders had similar pepsin and BA concentrations. Airway cellularity was not significantly different between groups of patients with or without pepsin or BA in induced sputum. Our results demonstrated the lack of differences in gastric content aspiration between patients with probable GOR-related CC and healthy control subjects. This might imply that the reflex cough theory may be more relevant than the reflux-associated aspiration theory in the pathophysiology of GORinduced chronic cough.


Clinical Reviews in Allergy & Immunology | 2014

Alternaria alternata and Its Allergens: a Comprehensive Review

Irena Kustrzeba-Wójcicka; Emilia Siwak; Grzegorz Terlecki; Anna Wolańczyk-Mędrala; Wojciech Mędrala

Alternaria alternata is mainly an outdoor fungus whose spores disseminate in warm, dry air, so in temperate climates, their count peaks in the summers. Alternaria may also be found in damp, insufficiently ventilated houses, where its allergenic properties cocreate the sick building syndrome. Mold-induced respiratory allergies and research on Alternaria both have a lengthy history: the first was described as early as 1698 and the second dates back to 1817. However, the two were only linked in 1930 when Alternaria spores were found to cause allergic asthma. The allergenic extracts from Alternaria hyphae and spores still remain in use but are variable and insufficiently standardized as they are often a random mixture of allergenic ingredients and coincidental impurities. In contrast, contemporary biochemistry and molecular biology make it possible to obtain pure allergen molecules. To date, 16 allergens of A. alternata have been isolated, many of which are enzymes: Alt a 4 (disulfide isomerase), Alt a 6 (enolase), Alt a 8 (mannitol dehydrogenase), Alt a 10 (alcohol dehydrogenase), Alt a 13 (glutathione-S-transferase), and Alt a MnSOD (Mn superoxide dismutase). Others have structural and regulatory functions: Alt a 5 and Alt a 12 comprise the structure of large ribosomal subunits and mediate translation, Alt a 3 is a molecular chaperone, Alt a 7 regulates transcription, Alt a NTF2 facilitates protein import into the nucleus, and Alt a TCTP acts like a cytokine. The function of four allergenic proteins, Alt a 1, Alt a 2, Alt a 9, and Alt a 70xa0kDa, remains unknown.


Pediatric Neurosurgery | 2002

Latex Allergy and Sensitization in Children with Spina bifida

Andrzej Obojski; Jacek Chodorski; Wojciech Barg; Wojciech Mędrala; Andrzej M. Fal; Józef Małolepszy

Background: The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence rate of latex sensitization and latex allergy among children with spina bifida and to evaluate risk factors for natural rubber latex hypersensitivity. Methods: A total of 34 children between 2.5 and 17 years of age participated in the study. Participants completed a questionnaire and underwent skin prick tests with latex, common aeroallergens and food allergens as well as measurements of specific IgE to latex and food allergens (RAST CAP). Results: The prevalence of latex sensitization and latex allergy was estimated to be 32.4 and 18.8%, respectively. The most common reported clinical manifestation of latex allergy was urticaria. Three out of six symptomatic patients reported anaphylactic reactions. Conclusion: We found that major risk factors for latex sensitization were atopy and a history of numerous operations.


International Journal of Immunogenetics | 2008

The G/G genotype of transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-β1) single nucleotide (+915G/C) polymorphism coincident with other host and environmental factors is associated with irreversible bronchoconstriction in asthmatics

Jerzy Liebhart; Małgorzata Polak; Andrzej Dabrowski; Rafal Dobek; Ewa Liebhart; Anna Dor-Wojnarowska; Wojciech Barg; Aleksandra Kulczak; Wojciech Mędrala; Urszula Gładysz; Andrzej Lange

Irreversible airflow obstruction may develop in some cases of asthma even in absence of known risk factors such as smoking and environmental insults and despite implementing apparently appropriate therapy. This implies that genetic factors may significantly contribute to determining the severity in the course of the disease. The published reports on genetic predisposition to irreversible bronchoconstriction in asthma, however, are relatively scarce, and disregard its potential association with transforming growth factor (TGF)‐β1 gene polymorphism despite established role that TGF‐β1 plays in airway remodelling. We tested TGF‐β1 single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at position +869 of codon 10 (leucine or proline) and position +915 of codon 25 (arginine or proline) for association with irreversible bronchoconstriction in a case–control study involving 110 patients with asthma and 109 controls. Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that genotype G/G at codon 25 was significantly associated with irreversible bronchoconstriction in asthmatics (odds ratio = 4.44; 95% confidence interval: 1.00–19.61; P = 0.05), but only after adjustment for gender, disease duration and smoking index. The influence of SNPs at codon 10 on irreversible airway obstruction was not significant. Our results suggest that presence of SNP (+915G/G) at codon 25 in TGF‐β1 gene may predispose to the development of irreversible bronchoconstriction in asthmatic patients, but only when coincident with the male gender, habitual smoking and relevant duration of the disease.


Thorax | 2013

Airway inflammation in patients with chronic non-asthmatic cough

Marcin Grabowski; Sven Seys; Ann Decraene; Ahmad Kasran; Ellen Dilissen; Wojciech Barg; Wojciech Mędrala; Lieven Dupont; Bernard Panaszek; Dominique Bullens

Introduction Chronic non-asthmatic cough (CC) is a clinical challenge and underlying pathophysiological mechanisms remain still not completely understood. One of the most common comorbidities in CC is gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD). Airway epithelium damage can contribute to airway inflammation in CC. Aims We studied airway inflammation in patients with CC compared to healthy controls. Patients with GORD were treated with proton pump inhibitors (PPI) and cough response to PPI was evaluated. Patients and methods Sputum was induced in 41 adults with CC and 20 healthy non-smokers who were age and sex matched. We compared sputum differential cell count by cytospin and cytokine and chemokine production at the mRNA and/or protein levels by real-time (RT)-PCR and cytokine bead array (CBA), between patients with CC and healthy subjects. Furthermore we studied airway inflammation in patients with different comorbidities. Results No differences in sputum differential cell counts were observed between patients with CC and healthy subjects. Sputum monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) protein levels were significantly higher in patients when compared to controls. Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) mRNA was significantly more often expressed in sputum of patients with CC than from healthy controls. Sputum transforming growth factor (TGF)-β levels did not differ between patients and controls, but were significantly lower in the PPI responders compared to the non-responders; p=0.047. There is no evidence for impaired T helper cell (Th)1/Th2/Th17 balance in CC. Patients with reflux oesophagitis (RO) have significantly more sputum eosinophils than patients without RO. Conclusions CC is a condition presenting with different disease phenotypes. High sputum MCP-1 levels are present in a large group of patients with CC and a majority of these patients with CC have increased sputum TSLP levels, most likely produced by damaged airway epithelial cells.


Postȩpy higieny i medycyny doświadczalnej | 2014

Allergens of mites

Emilia Siwak; Anna Skotny; Ewa Zbrojewicz; Anna Wolańczyk-Mędrala; Wojciech Mędrala; Irena Kustrzeba-Wójcicka

Mite allergens belong to the group of inhalant allergens and represent antigenic substances which are particutlarly important in the pathogenesis of respiratory system diseases and skin diseases. The most common diseases associated with chronic exposure to these aeroallergens include: allergic rhinitis, bronchial asthma and atopic dermatitis. Mite allergens are simple proteins or glycoproteins with different molecular structures and various biochemical functions. The sensitizing capacity of these proteins is connected from their physicochemical properties. Individual allergens perform, among others, the functions of structural proteins, act as enzymes, transport lipids, bind metal ions, and are capable of glycosylation. In addition, mite allergenic proteases degrade proteins of the skin epithelium-resulting in a weakening of its natural protective barrier-and induce the immune response. The proteases also induce the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines: interleukin-4 (IL-4), interleukin 6 (IL-6), interleukin 8 (IL-8), eotaxin, and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor-GM-CSF. The article presents the tertiary structure of major and mid-range mite allergens and their classification. Based on literature reports concerning the chemical structure of allergenic proteins, it was emphasized that the structural differences between homologous proteins with allergenic pozoproperties relate to the distribution of amino acid residues on the surface of the molecule. IgE binding affinity and the similarities and differences in the amino acid sequence of the allergens were also the basis for determining cross-reactivity of allergenic proteins. The paper shows an example of this phenomenon, describing the existence of common allergens for various mite species.


Advances in Dermatology and Allergology | 2017

Food-dependent, exercise-induced anaphylaxis triggered by co-incidence of culprit food, physical effort and a very high dose of ibuprofen or menstruation: a case report

Krzysztof Gomułka; Anna Wolańczyk-Mędrala; Wojciech Barg; Wojciech Mędrala

Address for correspondence: Krzysztof Gomułka MD, PhD, Department of Internal Diseases and Allergology, Medical University of Wroclaw, 66 Marii Curie-Skłodowskiej St, 50-369 Wroclaw, Poland, phone: +48 71 784 25 28, e-mail: [email protected] Received: 11.12.2015, accepted: 22.04.2016. Food-dependent, exercise-induced anaphylaxis triggered by co-incidence of culprit food, physical effort and a very high dose of ibuprofen or menstruation: a case report


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2011

CD164 as a Basophil Activation Marker.

Anna Wolańczyk-Mędrala; Wojciech Barg; Wojciech Mędrala

Introduction of flow cytometric technique to the research on basophil activation has led to significant achievements in allergy diagnosis in vitro. Most of the studies employing the flow cytometry used CD63 as a marker of basophil activation and only some of them used CD203c. Recently discovered basophil activation markers, including CD164, opened new possibilities for solving majority of current diagnostic needs. Use of allergen-induced CD164 upregulation in diagnosis of pollen allergy has been validated, and this encourages to further studies on other diagnostic usefulness of this marker. There are some hopeful data indicating that it might be useful in diagnosis of allergy caused by variety of other allergens, including drug allergens. Although CD164 upregulation as a marker of basophil activation is a promising and powerful diagnostic tool, it still requires a lot of both basic research and comparative studies with older and well known markers, in order to select the best of them. A research on basophil CD164 upregulation caused by various stimuli offers a good possibility to increase our knowledge of basophils involvement in allergic inflammation. Moreover, this might trigger a variety of pharmacological studies with known and new anti-inflammatory drugs in the future.


Advances in Clinical and Experimental Medicine | 2018

The diagnostic usefulness of the basophil activation test (BAT)with annexin V in an allergy to Alternaria alternata

Emilia Królewicz; Krzysztof Gomułka; Anna Wolańczyk-Mędrala; Wojciech Mędrala; Wojciech Barg; Irena Kustrzeba-Wójcicka

BACKGROUNDnThe basophil activation test (BAT) is an effective diagnostic tool in mold allergy, which is still not sufficiently known.nnnOBJECTIVESnThe aim of our study was to assess the degree of annexin V binding to the surface of the basophil cell membrane after stimulation with anti-immunoglobulin E (anti-IgE) and Alternaria alternata allergenic extract.nnnMATERIAL AND METHODSnAlternaria alternata allergic patients (n = 32) and healthy volunteers (n = 33) were evaluated using skin prick tests (SPT), quantification of specific IgE (sIgE) and the BAT. Basophil activation was detected as a percentage degree of annexin V binding to the surface of the basophil cell membrane.nnnRESULTSnReceiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis yielded a threshold value of 4.95% of activated basophils when the tested group and control group were studied, with a sensitivity and specificity of 100% (area under curve [AUC] = 1; p = 0.00000) for 100 SBU/mL Alternaria alternata allergen extract. The threshold value was 10.28% with a sensitivity of 93.8% and specificity of 100% (AUC = 0.98958; p = 0.00000) for 10 SBU/mL mold extract, and 9.37% with a sensitivity of 90.3% and specificity of 100% (AUC = 0.96307; p = 0.00000) for 1 SBU/mL Alternaria alternata allergen extract. The method was least efficacious in antiIgE stimulation, where the threshold value was 5.48% with a sensitivity of 90.6% and specificity of 30.3% (AUC = 0.46780; p = 0.67039).nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe BAT with annexin V and sIgE measurement against Alternaria alternata increase the capability of a diagnostic laboratory for detecting mold sensitization. Both methods may certainly replace SPT, which are currently routinely used in allergy diagnosis. Annexin V may be considered a new basophil activation marker with an efficacy comparable to that of CD63 or CD203c.


Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine | 2010

Food-dependent exercise-induced anaphylaxis-sequence of causative factors might be reversed.

Anna Wolańczyk-Mędrala; Wojciech Barg; Anna Radlińska; Bernard Panaszek; Wojciech Mędrala

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Wojciech Barg

Wrocław Medical University

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Andrzej M. Fal

Wrocław Medical University

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Bernard Panaszek

Wrocław Medical University

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Andrzej Obojski

Wrocław Medical University

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Krzysztof Gomułka

Wrocław Medical University

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Emilia Siwak

Wrocław Medical University

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