TY - JOUR
T1 - Rhinovirus infection preferentially increases lower airway responsiveness in allergic subjects
AU - Gern, James E.
AU - Calhoun, William
AU - Swenson, Cheri
AU - Shen, Guanghong
AU - Busse, William W.
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - Rhinovirus (RV) infections are important triggers of acute asthma symptoms in susceptible persons. To determine whether the presence of allergy is a risk factor for enhanced lower airway effects during RV infection, we experimentally infected (RV16) 18 volunteers with allergic rhinitis and 13 normal control subjects and measured the effects on the response of the lower airways to histamine. All subjects were successfully infected, as indicated by increased upper respiratory symptoms and RV16 cultured from nasal secretions. The change in histamine PD20(ΔPD20) caused by RV infection was significantly different in allergic subjects from that in nonallergic control subjects (ΔPD20 = -0.40 versus -0.03 log units, p = 0.04). This relationship was strengthened after adjusting for initial PD20 and FEV1 (mean ΔPD20 = -0.43 versus 0.01 log units, p < 0.01). The virus-induced ΔPD20 was also influenced by baseline lung function: there was a positive correlation between initial FEV1 and ΔPD20, and a weak but significant negative correlation between baseline PD20 and ΔPD20. These findings indicate that host factors such as allergy, baseline FEV1, and baseline PD20 influence the changes in lower airway physiology caused by RV infection and raise the possibility that these factors contribute to the increased lower airway effects of RV infection in subjects with asthma.
AB - Rhinovirus (RV) infections are important triggers of acute asthma symptoms in susceptible persons. To determine whether the presence of allergy is a risk factor for enhanced lower airway effects during RV infection, we experimentally infected (RV16) 18 volunteers with allergic rhinitis and 13 normal control subjects and measured the effects on the response of the lower airways to histamine. All subjects were successfully infected, as indicated by increased upper respiratory symptoms and RV16 cultured from nasal secretions. The change in histamine PD20(ΔPD20) caused by RV infection was significantly different in allergic subjects from that in nonallergic control subjects (ΔPD20 = -0.40 versus -0.03 log units, p = 0.04). This relationship was strengthened after adjusting for initial PD20 and FEV1 (mean ΔPD20 = -0.43 versus 0.01 log units, p < 0.01). The virus-induced ΔPD20 was also influenced by baseline lung function: there was a positive correlation between initial FEV1 and ΔPD20, and a weak but significant negative correlation between baseline PD20 and ΔPD20. These findings indicate that host factors such as allergy, baseline FEV1, and baseline PD20 influence the changes in lower airway physiology caused by RV infection and raise the possibility that these factors contribute to the increased lower airway effects of RV infection in subjects with asthma.
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U2 - 10.1164/ajrccm.155.6.9196088
DO - 10.1164/ajrccm.155.6.9196088
M3 - Article
C2 - 9196088
AN - SCOPUS:0030919103
SN - 1073-449X
VL - 155
SP - 1872
EP - 1876
JO - American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
JF - American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
IS - 6
ER -