Publication | Open Access
Parasympathetic nervous system in nocturnal asthma
148
Citations
25
References
1988
Year
AsthmaInflammatory Lung DiseaseLung InflammationBreathing DisordersPeripheral Nervous SystemClinical PhysiologyPulmonary PharmacologyRespiratory NeurobiologyHealth SciencesSleepAllergyRespiration (Physiology)Nervous SystemSleep Disordered BreathingHuman PhysiologyPhysiologyParasympathetic Nervous SystemPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsVagal BlockadeCentral Nervous SystemNocturnal AsthmaMedicineNocturnal Fall
To investigate the effect of vagal blockade with atropine on nocturnal fall in peak expiratory flow rate 10 patients with asthma who had a diurnal variation in peak expiratory flow rate of >20% were given 30 μg/kg of intravenous atropine or a placebo at 4 am and 4 pm. Vagal blockade caused significant bronchodilatation at 4 am and 4 pm (peak expiratory flow rate rose from 260 to 390 l/min at 4 am and 400 to 440 l/min at 4 pm) and significantly increased the pulse rate from 60 to 121 beats/minute at 4 am and from 76 to 122 beats/minute at 4 pm. Nocturnal asthma was almost totally reversed, implying that vagal mechanisms are fundamental in its pathophysiology. Other mechanisms—diurnal changes in plasma adrenaline concentration, the activity of non-adrenergic non-cholinergic nerves, and circadian rhythms of inflammatory mediator activity—may also be implicated.
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