These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: [Comparison of the characteristics of methacholine and of propranolol in the assessment of aspecific hyperreactivity of the airways]. Author: Schultze-Werninghaus G, Siekmeier R, Laxy T. Journal: Pneumologie; 1991 Sep; 45(9):729-33. PubMed ID: 1946267. Abstract: Quantitative bronchial challenge tests with methacholine and propranolol were performed in volunteers with bronchial asthma (n = 17) and in normal controls (n = 13), in order to test the earlier assumption that propranolol might be more useful to assess nonspecific bronchial responsiveness in bronchial asthma. The investigations were performed in random order, with a minimum interval of 24-hours. The aerosol was administered by a dosimeter (APS, Jaeger), using doubling concentrations, with a maximum of 25 mg/ml (2.5%), the lowest concentrations being 0.26 mg/ml (propranolol) and 0.03 mg/ml (methacholine), respectively. The provocation dose at a decrease in sGaw of 50% (PD50) was calculated from the dose-response curve. While methacholine induced an airways obstruction sufficient to calculate a PD50 in 29/30 subjects, propranolol was similarly effective in only 19/30 cases the rank correlation coefficient was 0.4368 (p less than 0.025). At a methacholine-PD50 greater than 0.2 mg(= concentration greater than 1 mg/ml) no propranolol-PD50 could be determined. In accordance with the literature, in the asthmatic subgroup the PD50sGaw [geometric means] were 25 (2.7-109.6) micrograms for methacholine, and 900 (75.9-3331) micrograms for propranolol, or 0.13 mumol and 3.46 mumol, respectively. The inhalation of propranolol in the highest possible concentration (limited solubility) induced airways obstruction only in subjects with asthmatic hyper-responsiveness. A similar distinction between asthmatic and normal subjects is possible by methacholine using a threshold concentration (in this study: cumulative PD50sGaw 0.2 mg or provocation concentration 1 mg/ml). Moreover, methacholine allows a determination of minor degrees of hyperresponsiveness, in mild airways obstruction or normal subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]