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Original Article
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Volume 329:90-95 July 8, 1993 Number 2
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Preventing Bronchoconstriction in Exercise-Induced Asthma with Inhaled Heparin
Tahir Ahmed, Jose Garrigo, and Ignacio Danta

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ABSTRACT

Background We have previously reported that inhaled heparin prevents allergic bronchoconstriction in sheep and inhibits the anti-IgE-mediated release of histamine from mast cells in vitro. Since the release of such mediators has been implicated in exercise-induced asthma, we investigated whether inhaled heparin could also attenuate the bronchoconstrictor response in this disease.

Methods On five days we studied 12 subjects with a history of exercise-induced asthma. On day 1 they underwent a standardized exercise challenge on a treadmill to document the presence of exercise-induced asthma. Minute ventilation was estimated with a calibrated respiratory inductive plethysmograph. The workload was increased until the heart rate reached 85 percent of the predicted maximal value, and was sustained for 10 minutes. The magnitude of bronchoconstriction was assessed by measuring specific airway conductance before and after the exercise. On day 2 the partial-thromboplastin time was measured in plasma obtained before and after the subjects inhaled a nebulized solution of heparin (1000 U per kilogram of body weight). On days 3 through 5 the subjects were pretreated with 4 ml of inhaled heparin (1000 U per kilogram), cromolyn sodium (20 mg), or placebo according to a single-blind, randomized, crossover design and underwent exercise challenge 45 minutes later. To exclude the possibility that heparin had any direct effect on airway smooth muscle, bronchial provocation with histamine was induced in five subjects on two further days after pretreatment with either heparin or placebo.

Results Inhaled heparin and cromolyn sodium had no effect on specific airway conductance at base line, but did attenuate the exercise-induced decreases in this variable: the mean (±SE) maximal decrease five minutes after exercise was 9 ±5 percent after pretreatment with heparin, as compared with 22 ±5 percent after pretreatment with cromolyn and 35 ±2 percent after pretreatment with placebo. Heparin did not change the partial-thromboplastin time and did not modify the bronchoconstrictor response to histamine.

Conclusions Inhaled heparin prevents exercise-induced asthma without influencing histamine-induced bronchoconstriction. This non-anticoagulant action of heparin is more likely to be related to a modulation of mediator release than to a direct effect on smooth muscle.


Source Information

From the Division of Pulmonary Disease, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, and Mount Sinai Medical Center, Miami Beach, Fla.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Ahmed at the Division of Pulmonary Disease, Mount Sinai Medical Center, 4300 Alton Rd., Miami Beach, FL 33140.

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