Ventilation-perfusion relationships in symptomatic asthma. Response to oxygen and clemastine
Continuous distributions of ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) ratios were measured in ten subjects with moderately severe symptomatic asthma. Six of the subjects had only minimal VA/Q inequality (mean log SD of bloodflow 0.5) despite having airways obstruction similar to that in the four subjects with ma...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Chest 1985-08, Vol.88 (2), p.167-175 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Continuous distributions of ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) ratios were measured in ten subjects with moderately severe symptomatic
asthma. Six of the subjects had only minimal VA/Q inequality (mean log SD of bloodflow 0.5) despite having airways obstruction
similar to that in the four subjects with marked VA/Q inequality (mean log SD of bloodflow 1.0). The six patients with minimal
VA/Q inequality developed marked widening of their VA/Q distributions while breathing 100 percent oxygen (mean log SD bloodflow
1.1), and four of these patients maintained more modest widening after receiving an intravenous antihistamine, clemastine
(mean log SD bloodflow 0.75). The four subjects with a wide control VA/Q distribution showed smaller changes while breathing
pure oxygen and no change after receiving clemastine. FEV1 improved with clemastine treatment in the first four patients only.
The results suggest that the majority of patients with moderately severe asthma have compensatory pulmonary vasoconstriction,
causing better VA/Q matching which is responsive to hypoxia and, possibly, histamine. The data demonstrate a relationship
between active compensatory vasoconstriction and airway sensitivity to antihistamine. |
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ISSN: | 0012-3692 1931-3543 |
DOI: | 10.1378/chest.88.2.167 |