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The protective effect of methylprednisolone on carbachol-induced bronchospasm.
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1984
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Acute Lung InjuryAsthmaAcute TreatmentInflammatory Lung DiseaseAllergyLung InflammationCarbachol ChallengeMedicineClinical TrialsDifferent Methylprednisolone DosesPulmonary PharmacologyClinical PharmacologyPharmacotherapyPulmonary MedicinePharmacologic InterventionPharmacologyProtective EffectPulmonary Disease
We studied the effect of acute treatment with methylprednisolone in 12 asthmatics not dependent on steroids. Carbachol challenge was performed according to a standardized method. Baseline measurements of forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), specific airway conductance (SGaw), the provocative dose of carbachol for a 20% decrease in FEV1 (PD20), and that for a 35% decrease in SGaw (PD35) were established. Thereafter, patients returned for retesting at 2, 4, and 6 wk. Prior to each visit, the patients received 1 of 3 treatments: placebo, low-dose (32 mg) methylprednisolone, or high-dose (128 mg) methylprednisolone given orally and distributed in a randomized double-blind fashion. Blood levels confirmed compliance in all subjects. All subjects remained stable throughout the study, with intrasubject FEV1 values agreeing within 5% at the start of each session. The pairwise differences for low-dose methylprednisolone versus placebo were significantly different for both PD20 (p = 0.0004) and PD35 (p = 0.0068). The pairwise differences for high-dose methylprednisolone versus placebo were also significantly different for PD20 (p = 0.04) and PD35 (p = 0.0034). Blocked comparisons of the 2 different methylprednisolone doses were not significantly different. We conclude that methylprednisolone has a protective effect on carbachol-induced bronchospasm, and that this effect is not dose-related at the two doses studied.