Abstract

Variability of airway function is a feature of asthma, spanning timescales from months to seconds. Short-term variation in airway resistance (R(rs)) is elevated in asthma and is thought to be due to increased variation in the contractile activation of airway smooth muscle. If true, then variation in R(rs) should decrease in response to bronchodilators, but this has not been investigated. Using the forced oscillation technique, R(rs) and the variation in R(rs) from 4-34 Hz were measured in 39 children with well-controlled mild-to-moderate asthma and 31 healthy controls (7-13 yrs) before and after an inhaled bronchodilator (200 microg salbutamol) or placebo. In agreement with other findings, baseline R(rs) at all frequencies and the sd of R(rs) (R(rs) sd) below 14 Hz were found to be elevated in asthma while neither forced expiratory volume in one second nor the mean forced expiratory flow between 25 and 75% of forced vital capacity were different compared with controls. The present authors found that R(rs) sd changed the most of any measurement in asthma, and this was the only measurement that changed significantly more in children with asthma following bronchodilator administration. The present results show that like airway narrowing, short-term airway variability of resistance may be a characteristic feature of asthma that may be useful for monitoring response to therapy.

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