The purpose was to study whether procaterol, a beta 2-stimulator, facilitated mucociliary transport on the ciliated airways in the human lungs. From immediately after inhalation of [99mTc]albumin aerosol, radioactivity of the thorax was continuously measured anteriorly by a gamma camera with the examinee in the supine position; the data were sequentially stored in a computer in 10-s frame mode. Three puffs (30 micrograms) of procaterol were inhaled from a metered dose inhaler at 60 min in the same supine position, and measurement of radioactivity was continued for 30 min more. Spirometry was performed before and after the measurement of radioactivity. A group of 8 normal subjects and 34 patients with various lung diseases, including 6 with bronchial asthma in remission, were studied. In addition to observation of mucus transport on the large airways by radioaerosol inhalation lung cinescintigraphy, the time-activity curve from the right lung was evaluated and the quantitative parameters for evaluating mucociliary clearance were calculated for the right lung. Following inhalation of procaterol, there were neither significant acceleration in mucus transport on the large airways by cinescintigraphy nor significant changes in the slope of time-activity curves. Quantitative parameters did not show any significant changes either, although spirometry indicated significant bronchodilation. We conclude that three puffs of inhaled procaterol neither necessarily accelerate mucus transport nor facilitate mucociliary clearance in the human lung.
Twenty-eight normal male subjects (13 nonsmokers and 15 smokers, 25 to 76 years of age) inhaled ultrasonically generated 99mTc-tagged human serum albumin aerosol (mass median diameter : 1.93,um with geometric standard deviation of 1.52) and radioactivity from the thorax was measured continuously from anteriorly in 10 sec frame mode for 90 to 120 min to evaluate mucociliary clearance function in the lungs. Normal values for lung retention ratio (LRR), airway deposition ratio (ADR), airway retention ratio (ARR), airway clearance efficiency (ACE), alveolar deposition ratio (ALDR), and disappearance rate of radioactivity from the ciliated airways (DR) were presented. ALDR was significantly larger in nonsmokers than in smokers. LRR and ARR were significantly smaller and ACE, significantly larger in smokers at any time intervals than in nonsmokers, while ADR and DR were larger in smokers only in the initial 30 min following radioaerosol inhalation was completed. Thereafter there was little difference in ADR and DR between normal smokers and nonsmokers.airway clearance efficiency ; airway deposition ratio ; airway retention ratio ; alveolar deposition ratio ; lung retention ratio Radioaerosol inhalation lung cine-scintigraphy has made it possible to visually evaluate how mucociliary clearance mechanisms are functioning in the lungs especially on the trachea and the proximal main bronchi (Isawa et al. 1981). While the mucous flow is invariably cephalad in direction in normal subjects (Isawa et al. 1981(Isawa et al. ,1984a, frequent stopping and starting of mucous globs, reversal of mucous flow, straying of the mucous globs to different regions of the lungs or even to the opposite lung, and/or zigzag motions are observed in patients with obstructive airways disease (Isawa et al. 1981(Isawa et al. , 1984. In addition to mucus
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