High tissue TGF-beta1 quantity in healthy nasal mucosa without its active form on the cell surface and its low quantity in polyps may reflect its essential role in the inhibitory mechanisms of nasal polyposis. Interleukin-5 plays a key role in the eosinophil recruitment and activation, and both atopic and nonatopic pathways might activate this process. The main sources of IL-5 and TGF-beta1 are the eosinophils and macrophages. Immediate hypersensitivity, besides other mechanisms, might be related to atopic polyps, but the involvement of other, local allergic mechanisms in IgE production of nonatopic polyp tissue cannot be excluded.
Altered histamine metabolism is thought to be involved in the pathomechanism of nasal polyposis characterized by local eosinophil infiltration. The present study was performed to determine whether histamine receptors play a role in the effect of histamine in nasal polyp tissue. The findings suggest that the expression of H1 and H4 receptors is elevated in polyp tissue (p = 0.045; p < 0.001), while the level of H2 and H3 receptors is not increased significantly. The elevation of H1 and H4 receptors' expression may indicate that the histamine related mechanisms are preferentially mediated through H1 and H4 histamine receptors in the polyp tissue. Simultaneously with increased H4 receptor expression, the concentration of eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) was increased significantly in polyp tissue (p = 0.002). One may speculate that the H4 receptor mediated histamine effects have a role in eosinophil accumulation and activation in inflammatory diseases of the nasal and paranasal sinus mucosa, such as nasal polyposis.
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