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Chest, Vol 76, 501-507, Copyright © 1979 by American College of Chest Physicians


ARTICLES

Enhanced responses to aerosolized bronchodilator therapy in asthma using respiratory maneuvers

DJ Riley, RT Liu and NH Edelman

To determine if respiratory maneuvers may enhance the response to inhaled bronchodilator drugs, we evaluated the bronchodilator responses when isoproterenol was: inhaled as a bolus high (80 percent VC) compared to low (20 percent VC) lung volumes, and inhaled as a single 800 microgram dose compared to four 200 microgram doses given 20 min apart. Nine asthmatic subjects inhaled isoproterenol sequentially at high and low lung volumes on two separate days; 15 others inhaled single doses of 200, 400, 600, and 800 microgram isoproterenol on four separate days. FEV1, specific conductance (Gaw/VL), Vmax50%, and the slope of phase 3 of the single-breath nitrogen test (deltaN2/L) were measured 10 min after each dose. FEV1 and Gaw/VL increased and deltaN2/L decreased more following inhalation at high compared to low lung volume (P less than 0.05). Gaw/VL increased more in the group given 800 microgram in divided doses than the group given a single dose (P less than 0.05). These findings suggest that the bronchodilator response to isoproterenol may be enhanced by inhaling the drug in divided doses sequentially and by delivering the drug near maximal inspiration. An enhanced response after the latter maneuver may be due to more uniform distribution of the drug to airway receptor sites.





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Copyright © 1979 by the American College of Chest Physicians.