| Literature DB >> 20525117 |
Bojana B Petanjek1, Sanja P Grle, Dubravka Pelicaric, Dubravka Vrankovic.
Abstract
: Anticholinergics, or specific antimuscarinic agents, by inhibition of muscarinic receptors cause bronchodilatation, which might correlate with activation of these receptors by the muscarinic agonist methacholine. The aim of this study was to determine whether a positive bronchodilator response to the anticholinergic ipratropium bromide could predict airway hyperresponsiveness in patients with persistent allergic asthma. The study comprised 40 patients with mild and moderate persistent allergic asthma. Diagnosis was established by clinical and functional follow-up (skin-prick test, spirometry, bronchodilator tests with salbutamol and ipratropium bromide, and methacholine challenge testing). The bronchodilator response was positive to both bronchodilator drugs in all patients. After salbutamol inhalation, forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) increased by 18.39 +/- 6.18%, p < .01, whereas after ipratropium bromide, FEV1 increased by 19.14 +/- 6.74%, p < .01. The mean value of FEV1 decreased by 25.75 +/- 5.16%, p < .01 after methacholine (PC20 FEV1 [provocative concentration of methacholine that results in a 20% fall in FEV1] from 0.026 to 1.914 mg/mL). Using linear regression, between methacholine challenge testing and bronchodilator response to salbutamol, a positive, weak, and stastistically significant correlation for FEV1 was found (p < .05). Correlations between methacholine challenge testing and the bronchodilator response to ipratropium bromide were positive and weak but not statistically significant. The positive bronchodilator response to ipratropium bromide could not predict airway hyperresponsiveness.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 20525117 PMCID: PMC2873608 DOI: 10.1186/1710-1492-3-4-123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol ISSN: 1710-1484 Impact factor: 3.406
Baseline Characteristics of Patients with Persistent Allergic Asthma
| Age (yr) | 34.40 (16-65) |
| Male/female | 23/17 |
| Baseline FEV1 % | 94.75% |
| Baseline FVC % | 110.61% |
| Sensitization to 1 allergen | 47.5% |
| Sensitization to 2 to 5 allergens | 52.5% |
FEV1 = forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC = forced vital capacity.
Percentage of Increase for Parameter FEV1 after the Bronchodilator Test with Salbutamol and Ipratropium Bromide and PC20FEV1 after Methacholine Challenge Testing
| Mean | 18.39 | 19.14 | 0.645 |
| SD | 6.18 | 6.74 | 0.540 |
| Minimum | 12.40 | 12.10 | 0.026 |
| Maximum | 35.60 | 37.20 | 1.914 |
FEV1 = forced expiratory volume in 1 second; PC20FEV1 = provocative concentration of methacholine that results in a 20% fall in FEV1.
Figure 1. B, Scatterplot diagram of the percent change in FEV1 after inhalation of salbutamol versus the natural logarithm of PC20FEV1 for methacholine challenge (r = .314, p = .049). Dashed lines represent the 95% confidence interval for linear regression.