The Effect of Inhaled Naloxone on Resting Bronchial Tone and Exercise-induced Asthma

1989 
We wanted to determine whether 10 mg naloxone inhaled quantitatively could modulate the resting bronchial tone and respiratory response in exercise-induced asthma (EIA). In 11 asthmatic subjects, we measured specific airway conductance (SGaw) and forced expiratory flow (FEF) before and after the inhalation of naloxone or saline. In another 10 asthmatic subjects, we measured SGaw, FEF, and the ventilatory gas exchange, heart rate, and blood pressure responses produced by a treadmill exercise during 3 separate days: without any pretreatment (Day 1) or preceded by the inhalation of either 10 mg naloxone (Day 2) or saline (Day 3). We found that after 10 mg inhaled naloxone only one of 11 subjects bronchodilated, displaying an isolated, reproducible ΔSGaw > 40% at 30 and 60 min. In the EIA protocol, the cardiopulmonary responses during exercise remained similar on all experimental days, but in seven of 10 subjects (all with o/oFEV1/FVC ⩾ 70% ΔSGaw was -60 ± 11%, + 1 ± 40%, and −52 ± 7% during no treatment, nal...
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