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The myth of maximal airway responsiveness in vivo
Authors:Brown, Robert H.   Mitzner, Wayne
Abstract:A sine quanon of hyperresponsive airway disease in asthmatic subjects is the lackof a maximal response with increasing doses of aerosol agonistchallenge. Normal subjects, however, often appear toexhibit an airway response plateau effect even when challenged withhigh concentrations of agonist. To investigate this question of maximalnarrowing in individual airways in vivo, we used high-resolutioncomputed tomography to visualize canine airways narrowed by two routesof agonist challenge. We compared airway narrowing induced bymethacholine (MCh) via the conventional aerosol route to that caused bylocal atomization of MCh directly to individual airways. Our resultsshowed that, with aerosol challenge, airway responses never reached atruly flat plateau even at the highest possible nebulizerconcentrations. Airway closure was never observed. However, when MChwas delivered directly to the airway luminal surface, airways could beeasily narrowed to complete closure at modest (10 mg/ml) agonistconcentrations. Thus neither the elastic recoil of the lung norlimitations of smooth muscle shortening can be responsible for theapparent plateauing of dose-response curves. We suggest that theplateau results from limitations associated with the delivery of highconcentration of agonists via the aerosol route.

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