Background: A direct comparison of the protective effects of single and regular doses of inhaled glucocorticoid on allergen-induced asthmatic responses and inflammation has not been made.
Objective: To compare the effects of pretreatment with fluticasone 250 microg 30 min before allergen inhalation and two weeks of 250 microg twice daily (last dose 24 h before challenge) with single and regular (twice daily) placebo doses on early and late asthmatic responses, induced sputum cell counts and measures of eosinophil activation at 7 h and 24 h, and methacholine airway responsiveness at 24 h.
Patients And Methods: Ten mild asthmatic patients were studied in a randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled crossover study.
Background: Repeated low-dose allergen challenge increases airway hyperresponsiveness and sputum eosinophils in atopic asthmatics. Inhaled corticosteroids attenuate the airway responses to high-dose allergen challenge, but have not been evaluated against repeated low dose challenge.
Objective: This study evaluates the effects of once daily treatments of two doses of inhaled budesonide on airway responses to repeated low-dose allergen challenge.
The hypothesis underlying the present study was that some of the variability in symptom intensity seen during acute bronchoconstriction may result from varying intensities of several stimuli yielding several sensations that can be identified by specific descriptive expressions (symptoms). A total of 232 subjects inhaled methacholine in doubling concentrations to a 20% decrease in FEV(1), or 64 mg/ml. The study identified the prevalence of dyspnea, nonspecific discomfort associated with the act of breathing, and 10 specific symptom expressions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMeasuring airway responsiveness to inhaled bronchoconstrictor stimuli, such as methacholine or histamine, has become an important tool in the diagnosis of asthma. This is measured by patients inhaling increasing doses or concentrations of the bronchoconstrictor stimulus until a given level of bronchoconstriction is achieved. Inhaled allergens initiate processes that increase airway inflammation and enhance airway hyperresponsiveness in asthmatic subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMast cells and basophils are metachromatic cells that participate in allergic inflammation. Allergen challenge to the airways of atopic asthmatic individuals increases levels of metachromatic cells, which may reflect an increase in mast cells, basophils, or both. We conducted a study to characterize the kinetics of basophil and mast cell recruitment to the airways of atopic asthmatic subjects after allergen inhalation challenge, using monoclonal antibodies specific for each type of cell.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Recognition of the importance of dendritic cells (DC) in the initiation of T-cell-dependent immune responses has led to increasing interest in methods for the identification of DC within the circulation. We sought to develop a flow cytometric method that would allow the reliable enumeration of absolute myeloid DC counts in minimally manipulated blood samples.
Methods: Myeloid DC were identified by three-color staining of whole blood leukocytes as a discrete population of mononuclear cells expressing high levels of HLA-DR and CD33, yet having little or no expression of CD14 and CD16.
Brain Behav Immun
March 2000
Recently, we reported that freely moving Flinders sensitive line rats (FSL, selectively bred for their cholinergic hyperresponsiveness) are more susceptible to allergen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness than their control counterparts-Flinders resistant line (FRL) rats. In this study the two Flinders lines were compared for responsiveness of excised tracheal and primary bronchial smooth muscle in vitro. FSL tissues were slightly but significantly more sensitive to cholinergic stimulation than FRL tissues (slightly lower EC(50) value for carbachol) but the FRL tissues were more responsive, exhibiting larger amplitude of response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdding inhaled long-acting beta(2)-agonists to a low dose of inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), results in better clinical asthma control than increasing the dose of ICS. However, this approach may mask underlying airway inflammation. In a double-blind parallel-group study, we evaluated the effect of adding formoterol to a low dose of budesonide, compared with a higher dose of budesonide, on the composition of induced sputum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInhaled corticosteroids are the most effective medications currently available to treat symptomatic asthma, and are free of clinically relevant unwanted effects, when used at the doses needed to provide optimal control in most patients with asthma. Inhaled corticosteroids also improve the physiological abnormalities of variable airflow obstruction and airway hyperresponsiveness that characterise asthma. Inhaled corticosteroids are also cost-beneficial when compared with other treatments, even in patients with milder asthma who are treated in primary care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Respir Crit Care Med
February 2000
Induced sputum cell counts provide a relatively noninvasive method to evaluate the presence, type, and degree of inflammation in the airways of the lungs. Their interpretation requires a knowledge of normal values from a healthy population. The objective was to examine the total and differential cell counts in induced sputum from a sample of healthy adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Formoterol and Corticosteroids Establishing Therapy (FACET) study has provided the first opportunity to examine the long-term effects of inhaled steroids and long-acting beta2-agonists on asthma-specific quality of life. The objectives of the present study were to: evaluate the effects of long-term (1 yr) formoterol and increasing doses of budesonide on asthma quality of life; 2) to determine whether initial improvements in quality of life are sustained when improvements in clinical indices persist; and 3) to evaluate the long-term relationship between changes in clinical indices and changes in quality of life. Of the 852 asthmatic adults enrolled, 470 from five countries participated in this quality of life evaluation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInternational guidelines on asthma management indicate that the primary goal of treatment should be optimum asthma control. The aim of this study was to develop and validate the Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ). The authors generated a list of all symptoms used to assess control and sent it to 100 asthma clinicians who were members of guidelines committees (18 countries).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Respir Cell Mol Biol
October 1999
Increases in bone-marrow (BM) inflammatory cell progenitors are associated with allergen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness and inflammation in asthmatics and dogs. Here, for the first time, we compare the time course of airway hyperresponsiveness, inflammation, and marrow progenitor responses in a mouse model of airway allergen challenge. Sensitized BALB/c mice were studied at 2, 12, 24, 48, and 72 h after intranasal ovalbumin or saline challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground & Aims: Tobacco smoking has a complex effect on intestinal inflammation, being protective in ulcerative colitis, whereas it aggravates Crohn's disease. The beneficial effect of smoking has been attributed to nicotine, but the mechanisms underlying the adverse effect are still under investigation. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of cigarette smoking on experimental colitis in rats and to investigate the underlying mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Respir Crit Care Med
August 1999
Airway eosinophilia is the hallmark of asthma exacerbation. Coordination of cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-5, eotaxin and regulated on activation, normal T-cell expressed and secreted (RANTES) seem to be necessary for eosinophil extravasation including adhesion, chemotaxis, and activation. The purpose of this study was to characterize both the kinetics of allergen-induced inflammatory cell recruitment to the airways and cytokines selective for eosinophil chemotaxis, activation, or resolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Respir Crit Care Med
August 1999
The identification, prevention, and prompt treatment of exacerbations are major objectives of asthma management. We looked at change in PEF, symptoms, and use of rescue beta-agonists during the 425 severe exacerbations that occurred during a 12-mo parallel group study (FACET) in which low and high doses of budesonide with and without formoterol were compared in patients with asthma. Oral corticosteroids were prescribed for severe exacerbations, the main study end point, defined as the need for a course of oral corticosteroids (n = 311) or a reduction in morning PEF of > 30% on two consecutive days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAsthma is characterized by reversible airway narrowing, by airway hyperresponsiveness, and by airway inflammation. Inhaled allergens are the most important of the stimuli known to cause asthma. Methods for studying inhaled allergen in the laboratory have been well standardized and extensively used for the investigation of the pathophysiology and the pharmacological modulation of allergen-induced airway responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Allergen inhalation challenge is a useful clinical model to investigate the effects of asthma therapies on allergen-induced airway responses; however, the repeatability of allergen-induced airway inflammation is not known.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate the repeatability of allergen-induced increases in sputum eosinophils. This information will allow the prediction of the number of subjects required in studies evaluating asthma therapies.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med
July 1999
The purposes of this study were to estimate the relative dose potency (RP) of two formulations of salbutamol pressurized metered-dose inhalers (Proventil-HFA and Ventolin-CFC MDIs) to protect against methacholine bronchoconstriction, to validate this method and provide recommendations. The protective effects of 100-, 200-, and 400-micrograms doses of Proventil-HFA were compared with the same doses of Ventolin-CFC in 18 adult asthmatics (mean FEV1, 92% predicted; mean baseline PC20 methacholine, 1.8 mg/ml), in a dose-level blind, balanced, eight-period, crossover, placebo-controlled study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Respir Crit Care Med
May 1999
Inhaled cysteinyl leukotrienes may cause recruitment of eosinophils into asthmatic airways. We compared the effects of inhaled leukotriene D4 (LTD4), methacholine, and allergen on airway eosinophils in 10 nonsmoking, atopic, mildly asthmatic subjects in a double-blind, diluent-controlled, randomized crossover study. Concentrations of LTD4, methacholine, and allergen resulting in a 30% decrease in FEV1, and diluent controls (ethanol and saline), were inhaled with at least 7 d between challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have previously shown that allergen inhalation by asthmatics is associated with increases in bone marrow eosinophil/basophil colony-forming cells (Eo/B-CFU), and increases in CD34(+) hemopoietic progenitors expressing the alpha-subunit of the IL-5 receptor (IL-5Ralpha). This study investigated the effect of inhaled corticosteroid on baseline numbers and allergen-induced increases in these parameters. Nine subjects with mild, stable asthma inhaled budesonide (400 microgram/d) for 8 d in a placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized crossover study.
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