Abstract

To determine the importance of central and local reflexes in the bronchoconstriction produced by inhaled aerosolized histamine, chloralose-urethan-anesthetized dogs were intubated with a double-lumen catheter, ventilated with a dual cylinder respirator, and instrumented for the measurements of pulmonary conductance (GL) and dynamic compliance (Cdyn) in each lung. In each dog, dose-response curves to inhaled aerosolized histamine were obtained in both lungs separately but synchronously. Four series of experiments were performed. In the first series (n = 10) the responses of the right and left lungs were compared and found to be approximately equal, indicating that one lung could be used as a control for the other. In the second and third series the dose-response curve of one lung that had either been treated with inhaled atropine sulfate (n = 6) (4 mg/ml) or vagotomized (n = 4) was compared with the contralateral control lung. At low concentrations of histamine, GL and Cdyn decreased more in the control lungs than in their atropine-treated or vagotomized counterparts, and approximately 40% of the bronchoconstriction induced was reflex in origin. At higher concentrations of histamine the responses of the control and atropine-treated or vagotomized lungs were not significantly different. In the fourth series of experiments (n = 6) histamine dose-response curves were obtained following combined bilateral vagotomy and unilateral delivery of inhaled aerosolized atropine. In these dogs GL, but not Cdyn, fell to a greater extent in the control than in the atropine-treated lung.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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