The effect of intravenously administered salbutamol on serum potassium in asthmatic and nonasthmatic atopic subjects

1985 
The role of adrenergic mechanism in the pathogenesis of allergic disease is controversial. Recent experimental and clinical reports have suggested that β-adrenergic blockade impairs and β stimulation enhances extrarenal potassium uptake in humans. This led us to study the effect of the intravenous administration of salbutamol, a specific β-2-adrenergic agonist, on serum potassium in 9 healthy subjects and in 23 patients with allergic asthma and/or rhinitis. Serum potassium fell significantly and reached a peak decline at the end of venous infusion in all the normal subjects. Seventeen atopic subjects showed a lower or absent serum K+ decrement: there was no difference between asthmatic and rhinitic patients. There was no relation among the salbutamol-induced serum potassium decrement, serum glucose increment, blood pressure and heart-rate changes, and nonspecific bronchial reactivity. These findings suggest that β-2-adrenergic hyporesponsiveness is present only in some allergic patients.
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