What Aspergillosis Patients Need to Know**
Part of the Aspergillosis Immune System Knowledge Hub
Eosinophils are a type of white blood cell central to allergy, asthma, and ABPA. They play a major role in symptoms, flare-ups, mucus plugging, and treatment responses.
This article explains eosinophils in simple terms.
🧬 1. What Are Eosinophils?
Eosinophils are immune cells filled with granules containing powerful enzymes.
They normally help:
-
fight parasites
-
regulate allergic inflammation
-
repair tissues
-
produce important immune signals
But in excess, they can cause damage — especially in the lungs.
🔥 2. Eosinophils in the Lungs
Activated eosinophils release their granules into airway tissues, causing:
-
swelling
-
increased mucus
-
airway narrowing
-
cough sensitivity
-
wheezing
-
breathlessness
This makes them key players in allergic and fungal-related lung disease.
🌟 3. Eosinophils in ABPA
Eosinophils are highly active in ABPA.
ABPA involves a strong “type-2” allergic response to Aspergillus, including:
-
high IgE
-
mast cell activation
-
large numbers of eosinophils
-
thick, sticky mucus
-
airway obstruction
-
repeated flare-ups
Eosinophils contribute significantly to long-term lung damage if not controlled.
🌬 4. Eosinophils in Severe Asthma and SAFS
In severe or allergic asthma:
-
eosinophils can be persistently high
-
they drive airway swelling
-
they increase sensitivity to triggers
-
they worsen recovery after infection
In SAFS, eosinophils may be moderately raised but symptoms can still be severe.
🦠 5. Eosinophils in CPA
In CPA, eosinophils are not usually the dominant cell, but they still matter when patients also have:
-
asthma
-
ABPA overlap
-
fungal allergy
-
airway hypersensitivity
-
steroid withdrawal flare-ups
🔗 6. How Eosinophils Link to Other Immune Cells
They interact with:
-
IgE → recruits eosinophils
-
T-helper cells (Th2) → tell bone marrow to make more
-
Mast cells → release histamine that pulls eosinophils into tissues
-
Airway lining cells → release distress signals
This is why severe allergic pathways often involve all three:
IgE → mast cells → eosinophils
💊 7. Treatments That Target Eosinophils
✔ Steroids (oral or inhaled)
Suppress eosinophil activity.
✔ Biologics
Directly reduce eosinophils:
-
Mepolizumab (anti-IL-5)
-
Benralizumab (anti-IL-5 receptor)
-
Reslizumab (anti-IL-5 infusion)
Reduce eosinophil recruitment:
-
Dupilumab (anti-IL-4/IL-13)
-
Tezepelumab (broad upstream suppression)
These can transform life for patients with severe asthma or ABPA.
🧠 8. Summary
Eosinophils are key drivers of:
-
flare-ups
-
mucus plugging
-
wheeze
-
breathlessness
-
airway damage
Understanding them helps patients:
-
interpret blood tests
-
understand biologic treatments
-
recognise flare-up patterns
-
manage ABPA and asthma more confidently
Next articles:
Share this post
Latest News posts
Voriconazole and Sun Sensitivity
April 14, 2025
Taking itraconazole for the first time?
April 11, 2025
What drugs are being developed to reduce steroid intake
April 11, 2025
🌙 How to Manage Insomnia (Gently and Practically)
April 2, 2025
Swimming for people with aspergillosis
April 2, 2025
Steroid-induced insomnia
April 1, 2025
HEPA filters & heat to reduce exposure to allergens
March 18, 2025
News archive
- ABPA
- Air Quality
- Airway Clearance, Diagnosis & Physiotherapy
- Antifungals
- Aspergilloma
- Aspergillus Bronchitis
- Biologics
- Blood Tests
- CPA
- Carers & Family
- Communities
- Complementary & Supplements
- Complications
- Conditions
- Diagnostics
- Environment
- Events & Recordings
- GP Guidance
- General interest
- Housing & Damp
- Imaging
- Immune System
- Lifestyle & Coping
- Living with Aspergillosis
- Mental Health
- Monitoring
- Monitoring & Safety
- NAC & Guidance
- NAC Announcements
- Other
- Other Forms Aspergillosis
- Patient Research
- Pets & Animals
- Professional Guidance
- Recordings
- Research
- Research Summaries
- SAFS / Severe Asthma
- Side Effects
- Specialists
- Steroids
- Symptoms
- Travel and Insurance
- Treatment
- Vaccines
- Weekly Updates
