In guinea-pigs citric acid-induced cough and bronchoconstriction were inhibited by β2-agonist and xanthine drugs. Lidocaine inhibited only cough. Cromoglycate and ipratropium bromide inhibited only bronchoconstriction. We conclude that cough and bronchoconstriction in guinea-pigs are distinct reflexes and that the inhibitory pharmacology of these airway reflexes may agree, in many respects, with that observed in asthmatic subjects.
We have developed a technique for measuring lung function in conscious guinea pigs using a whole body plethysmograph. Because guinea pigs breathe through the nose, a technique was also developed to measure nasal and lower respiratory system conductance simultaneously in anesthetized animals. The upper and the lower airways could be challenged separately and studied in a manner similar to the conditions in the plethysmograph. Aerosols of histamine, carbachol, or ovalbumin delivered to the nose in sensitized animals had no effect on nasal conductance, even in doses 100 times higher than that required to reduce lower respiratory system conductance. However, intravenous histamine increased nasal conductance. Thus, although nasal resistance constitutes the majority of the total respiratory system resistance measured in the plethysmograph, nasal resistance is unaffected by the aerosol drugs studied. We therefore consider changes in resistance measured in the plethysmograph to originate at or below the larynx. The plethysmographic technique described here is a reliable, reproducible, and rapid technique that enables repeated measurement in animals and minimizes animal trauma.
The effect of allergen challenge on the number of leucocytes and the concentration of endothelin 1-like immunoreactivity (ET-LI) in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was investigated in guinea-pigs sensitized to Ascaris suum. The animals were twice exposed to allergen aerosol. All animals responded to the second challenge with bronchoconstriction. Twelve hours later, a significant increase in the number of eosinophilic granulocytes in BALF, compared to unsensitized and unprovoked control animals, was noted. Twenty-four hours after provocation, there was also an elevation of ET-LI concentration and content of neutrophils. During the first day post-challenge, the ET-LI values were moderately correlated to the eosinophil levels. One week after challenge, the ET-LI level and the neutrophil count did not differ from corresponding values in control animals whereas the number of eosinophils remained elevated. Pretreatment with dexamethasone before the second allergen challenge did not consistently affect the parameters studied during the first 24 h. Bronchoconstriction induced by carbachol aerosol affected significantly neither the ET-LI concentration nor the number of inflammatory cells in BALF. It is concluded that the allergen-induced inflammation in the guinea-pig airways causes an elevation in the ET-LI concentration in BALF and that this is moderately correlated to the influx of eosinophils during the first 24 h.
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