Publications
Department of Medicine faculty members published more than 3,000 peer-reviewed articles in 2022.
1983
1983
1983
We studied whether the muscarinic antagonist, atropine, given intravenously or by inhalation, inhibits the bronchoconstrictor responses to inhaled acetylcholine and to acetylcholine released by electrical stimulation of the vagus nerves to the same degree. We assessed bronchoconstrictor responses in anesthetized dogs by determining the increase in total pulmonary resistance before and after increasing doses of atropine and then constructing inhibition dose-response curves. Before atropine the responses to the two stimuli were equal in magnitude. After intravenous atropine (initial dose 0.12 micrograms/kg, total dose 16 micrograms/kg) both responses were progressively inhibited to a similar degree. By contrast, after inhaled atropine (initial dose 0.02 micrograms/kg, total dose 2.4 micrograms/kg) the response to acetylcholine inhalation was inhibited to a much greater degree than the response to vagal stimulation. Thus, in studies designed to inhibit bronchoconstriction due to an inhaled muscarinic agonist to the same degree as bronchoconstriction due to a vagal reflex, atropine might better be given intravenously than by inhalation.
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We undertook a study to determine whether the apparent disparity between the dose of inhaled atropine required to inhibit the bronchoconstriction induced by inhaled methacholine and the dose required to inhibit the bronchoconstriction induced by eucapnic hyperpnea with cold air is a function of the route of administration of atropine. In six subjects with asthma, we constructed dose-response curves to inhaled methacholine and to eucapnic hyperpnea with cold air after treatment with inhaled atropine (0.5 mg delivered) and intravenous placebo, with inhaled placebo and intravenous atropine (0.5 mg injected), and with inhaled and intravenous placebos. Atropine by either route shifted the dose-response curves to both cold air and to methacholine to the right. In every subject, however, inhaled atropine caused a markedly greater rightward shift of the inhaled methacholine dose-response curve than did intravenous atropine, whereas inhaled and intravenous atropine had similar effects on the cold air dose-response curve. These findings suggest that the apparent disparity between the doses of atropine required to inhibit methacholine- and cold air-induced bronchoconstriction may be a function of the route of administration of atropine and thus does not imply a nonmuscarinic action of atropine. The findings support the view that cold air causes bronchoconstriction via muscarinic pathways.
View on PubMed1982
1982
1982
1982