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Airway hyperresponsiveness to bronchoconstrictor challenge after wood smoke exposure in guinea pigs.
      

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Title: Airway hyperresponsiveness to bronchoconstrictor challenge after wood smoke exposure in guinea pigs.
Author: Hsu, T H : Kou, Y R
Citation: Life-Sci. 2001 May 18; 68(26): 2945-56
Abstract: Prior airway exposure to wood smoke induces an increase in airway responsiveness to subsequent smoke inhalation in guinea pigs (Life Sci. 63: 1513, 1998; 66: 971, 2000). To further characterize this airway hyperreactivity, we investigated and compared the airway responsiveness to bronchoconstrictor challenge before and 30 min after sham air exposure or wood smoke exposure in anesthetized and artificially ventilated guinea pigs. Various doses of substance P (0.8-6.4 microg/kg), capsaicin (0.2-3.2 microg/kg), prostaglandin F2alpha (30-3000 microg/kg), histamine (1-8 microg/kg), or acetylcholine (5-20 microg/kg) were intravenously injected at 2-min intervals in successively increasing doses to obtain the dose required to provoke a 200% increase in baseline total lung resistance (ED200). Wood smoke exposure significantly lowered the ED200 of substance P, capsaicin, and prostaglandin F2alpha whereas sham air exposure failed to do so. Furthermore, wood smoke exposure did not significantly alter the ED200 of histamine or acetylcholine. Pretreatment with phosphoramidon (2 mg/kg), an inhibitor of the neutral endopeptidase (the major degradation enzyme of substance P), before smoke exposure did not significantly affect the smoke-induced reduction in ED200 of substance P. Sectioning both cervical vagi before smoke exposure did not significantly alter the smoke-induced reduction in ED200 of capsaicin or prostaglandin F2alpha. These results suggest that airway exposure to wood smoke acutely produces airway hyperresponsiveness to substance P, capsaicin, and prostaglandin F2alpha, but not to histamine or acetylcholine. Since the combination of phosphoramidon and wood smoke exposure did not result in an additive potentiation of smoke-induced airway hyperresponsiveness to substance P, it is suggested that an inhibition of the degradation enzyme of substance P may contribute to this increase in airway reactivity. Furthermore, vagally-mediated bronchoconstriction does not play a vital role in enhanced airway responsiveness to capsaicin or prostaglandin F2alpha.
Review References: None
Notes: None
Language: English
Publication Type: Journal-Article
Keywords: Bronchial Hyperreactivity physiopathology : Bronchoconstrictor Agents pharmacology : Lung drug effects : Smoke adverse effects : Substance P pharmacology : Wood
URL: http://www.elsevier.com/locate/lifescie