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The purpose of this study is to learn if chemicals from the mouth or stomach can be found in the lungs. This may suggest a process called aspiration. This study may help us understand if aspiration plays a role in different lung diseases.
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This study is a single center, prospective, observational study of determining pepsin levels in BALF samples obtained from consecutive bronchoscopies at the Mayo Clinic Jacksonville. It is inherently an exploratory pilot study to confirm whether pepsin in BAL can act as a marker of gastric to pulmonary aspiration and whether specific association to pulmonary pathologies can be identified.
As an overview, all patients who are undergoing a bronchoscopy for clinical indications will be screened for potential participation in the study by obtaining BALF samples during the procedure for laboratory analyses. The BALF will then be tested for pepsin at the Thoracic Diseases Research Unit (Mayo Clinic Rochester) using a commercially available ELISA kit, and the ancillary markers will be analyzed per the clinical laboratory. Internal controls will be defined as normals when subjects have no lung dysfunction, no respiratory symptoms, and no lung parenchymal infiltrates on chest radiographs.
The primary aims of this project parallels the short-term hypotheses stated above:
Secondary aims of the study will include exploratory analyses of lesser defined potential aspiration markers including bilirubin, lipase, amylase, and pepsinogen. Analyses of these markers will parallel the analyses performed for pepsin.
The focus of the study is to:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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