Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 149, No. 1, Jan 1994, 81-85.
Changes in pulmonary function and cross-sectional area of trachea and bronchi in asthmatics following inhalation of procaterol hydrochloride and ipratropium bromide
V Hoffstein, N Zamel, P McClean and KR Chapman
Department of Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Canada.
To determine the sites of action of inhaled adrenergic and anticholinergic
bronchodilators, we used the acoustic reflection technique to measure
airway area before and after administration of beta 2-selective
adrenoreceptor agonist (procaterol hydrochloride) and quaternary
anticholinergic agent (ipratropium bromide). Eight stable individuals with
asthma (five men and three women; mean age, 34 +/- 12.7 yr) were studied on
2 days in single-blind randomized crossover fashion when they
self-administered (using metered-dose inhaler) two puffs of either
procaterol hydrochloride hemihydrate (10 micrograms/puff) or ipratropium
bromide (20 micrograms/puff). Maximal expiratory flow-volume curve,
specific airway resistance, and cross- sectional areas of three airway
segments (extrathoracic tracheal, intrathoracic tracheal, and bronchial)
were recorded at baseline and 15, 30, 60, and 120 min after drug
administration. Both agents produced significant improvements in FEV1, FVC
and forced expiratory flow at 50% of vital capacity (V50), and specific
airway resistance (SRaw) as early as 15 min after drug administration.
These effects were sustained for the 120 min monitoring period. However,
all improvements were significantly greater for procaterol than for
ipratropium. By contrast, there was no significant difference between drugs
in the increased production in the cross-sectional areas of the three
airway segments although there was a nonsignificant trend toward greater
increases in tracheal area produced by the anticholinergic agent.(ABSTRACT
TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)