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ABSTRACT |
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Winter athletes have an increased incidence of asthma, suggesting
that repetitive hyperventilation with cold air may predispose individuals to airways disease. We used a canine model of exercise-induced hyperpnea to examine the effects of repeated hyperventilation with cool, dry air (i.e., dry air challenge [DAC]) on peripheral airway resistance (Rp), reactivity, and inflammation. Specific bronchi were exposed to a single DAC on five consecutive days. Rp and
Rp to aerosolized histamine, intravenous histamine, or hypocapnia were measured daily. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was
obtained on the fifth day. Rp increased from 0.70 ± 0.08 to 1.13 ± 0.22 cm H2O/ml/s (n = 25) 24 h after the first DAC, rose to 1.49 ± 0.24 cm H2O/ml/s by Day 3, and remained elevated throughout the remainder of the protocol. Repeated DAC increased reactivity to hypocapnia and intravenous histamine. Intravenous salbutamol failed to reduce Rp as effectively in challenged airways (111% of
Day 1 baseline) as in naive airways (54% of baseline). Repeated DAC
caused increased BALF neutrophils, eosinophils, and sulfidopeptide leukotrienes. We conclude that repeated DAC causes peripheral airways inflammation, obstruction, hyperreactivity, and impaired
-agonist-induced relaxation. This suggests that other mechanisms in addition to increased smooth muscle tone may contribute to the development of repetitive hyperventilation-induced bronchial obstruction and hyperreactivity.
Keywords: asthma;
-agonist; bronchoconstriction; hyperreactivity;
airway resistance
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INTRODUCTION |
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Numerous studies of human athletes who exercise in cold environments document an increased incidence of airways hyperreactivity in these subjects (1). Furthermore, the increased incidence of airways disease seems to be related to the severity of the exercise and the ambient temperature. Athletes who exercise in very cold environments (e.g., cross-country skiers) have a high incidence (~ 45%) of airways hyperreactivity or asthma (1, 4), whereas athletes who exercise in less frigid conditions (ice hockey players, figure skaters) tend to have a somewhat lower incidence (~ 30%) (2, 3). Athletes who exercise in a warmer environment at levels comparable to hockey players (e.g., basketball players) do not exhibit an increased incidence of airways hyperreactivity compared with a control population (3). None of these studies has reported a difference in the incidence of atopy between the athletes and control populations, suggesting that repeated hyperventilation with cold dry air predisposes these athletes to airways hyperreactivity.
We have developed a canine model of hyperventilation-induced airways obstruction similar to that described for human
athletes. In our model, local insufflation of room temperature
air into canine peripheral airways produces the same degree
of airway cooling as does hyperventilation with subfreezing air
in human peripheral airways (5, 6). Similarities between the
human condition and the canine model extend to the timing of
hyperventilation-induced bronchoconstriction (HIB) and the
attenuation of HIB by numerous pharmacologic agents (5).
We recently reported that hyperventilation with cool dry air
repeated every other day for 14 d caused bronchial obstruction and eosinophilia in canine peripheral airways (7). The
present study was designed to test three specific hypotheses: (1) Short-term daily hyperventilation with cool dry air is sufficient for the development of an asthmalike state characterized
by airway obstruction, inflammation, and airways hyperreactivity; (2) Repetitive hyperventilation-induced peripheral airways obstruction is reversible by a
-adrenergic agonist; and
(3) Repetitive hyperventilation-induced airways obstruction is
associated with leukocyte infiltration and the release of biochemical mediators. In testing these hypotheses, we first hyperventilated canine peripheral airways daily for four consecutive days and documented leukocyte infiltration and changes in baseline peripheral airway resistance (Rp) and reactivity
(
Rp). We then repeated this protocol using salbutamol 24 h
after the last dry air challenge (DAC) to document the degree
of reversibility in airway obstruction produced by repetitive
DAC. Finally, we used correlation analyses to determine relationships between the magnitudes of peripheral airways obstruction observed 24 h after the last DAC, the infiltration of
specific leukocytes, and the release of bronchoactive eicosanoids.
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METHODS |
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In all studies, dogs were anesthetized and instrumented on five consecutive days. A sublobar airway was randomly selected on Day 1, wedged with a bronchoscope, and peripheral airway resistance (Rp) was recorded as previously described (8). In protocol A (Table 1) (n = 12), peripheral airway reactivity to hypocapnia, aerosolized histamine, and DAC were measured using established techniques (9). Rp was allowed to recover after each challenge, and a stable baseline Rp was recorded prior to the next challenge. In protocol B (Table 1), a sublobar airway was randomly selected to receive daily DAC as described above (n = 4). However, instead of evaluating reactivity using hypocapnia or aerosolized histamine, reactivity in these airways was evaluated using an intravenous histamine challenge. These protocols were repeated in the same sublobar airways on Days 2 through 5. Data from Protocol A and Protocol B were pooled to determine the effect of repeated hyperventilation on Rp. In protocol C (Table 1), a randomly selected sublobar airway was designated as the control (Wedge) airway (n = 6). Baseline Rp and reactivity to hypocapnia and aerosolized histamine were measured as in the 4×DAC airways. However, no DAC was administered to the Wedge airways during this protocol.
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To determine the ability of intravenous salbutamol to reverse repeated DAC-induced peripheral airway obstruction, baseline Rp and the response to DAC was measured in a randomly selected sublobar airway (n = 6) on four consecutive days (Protocol D, Table 1). On Day 5, baseline Rp was recorded, and then salbutamol was administered by intravenous infusion. Rp was recorded 5 min after completion of the infusion.
To determine the effect of repeated hyperventilation on airway inflammation, seven dogs were anesthetized and instrumented on 5 consecutive days. In one airway (4 × DAC), Rp was measured before and after DAC. In the second airway, Rp was measured, but the airway was not challenged during the course of the experiment (wedge). This protocol was repeated on Day 2 and Day 3 in the same sublobar airways. In addition, on Day 3 a third sublobar airway was identified (2 × DAC), and Rp was measured before and after DAC. All three airways received their respective treatments on Day 4. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was done on Day 5 in each of the three principal sublobar airways and a fourth unwedged control airway. The latter BALF served as a control for repeated wedging of the bronchoscope. BAL fluid (BALF) was analyzed for nucleated cell and eicosanoid concentrations using previously published techniques (7).
Rp and reactivity data were analyzed using the Friedman repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA). The Dunn's test applied to ranks was used to compare individual treatment means. The Mann-Whitney Rank Sum test was used to compare BALF cellular and biochemical data from control and wedge airways. The Kruskal-Wallis test was used to compare BALF data from wedge, 2 × DAC, and 4 × DAC airways. Statistical significance in all cases was judged at p < 0.05. All values are expressed as the mean ± SEM.
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RESULTS |
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All dogs tolerated the protocols well, with no signs of respiratory disease or other effects of repeated anesthesia. Bronchoscopic examination of the principal airways revealed mucus accumulation in challenged airways, whereas wedge control airways appeared grossly normal. For the purposes of presentation and discussion, Day 1 is defined as the first day a specific airway is wedged with a bronchoscope. Thus, because the 2×DAC airway was first wedged on the third day of the protocol, Day 1 for the 2×DAC airways corresponds chronologically with Day 3 for the wedge and 4×DAC airways. Because of interairway variation in the initial (Day 1) Rp values, we express airway resistance and reactivity data graphically as a change from the corresponding Day 1 value. However, the raw data were used for all statistical analyses.
Baseline Rp on Day 1 was 0.88 ± 0.25, 0.70 ± 0.21, and 0.70 ± 0.08 cm H2O/ml/s for the wedge (n = 13), 2×DAC (n = 7), and 4×DAC (n = 25) lobes, respectively. Baseline Rp in the wedge airway did not change over the course of the protocol (p > 0.05), but baseline Rp increased in the 2×DAC and 4×DAC lobes (p < 0.001) (Figure 1).
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In naive canine airways (n = 6), we found that 11 µg/kg of intravenous salbutamol caused a 46% decrease in the predrug baseline Rp values (presalbutamol Rp = 1.38 ± 0.38 cm H2O/ ml/s, postsalbutamol Rp = 0.70 ± 0.19 cm H2O/ml/s). In the airways used to examine the effects of intravenous salbutamol on repeated DAC-induced airways obstruction, baseline Rp on Day 1 was 0.63 ± 0.10 cm H2O/ml/s. Rp increased with repeated DAC (p = 0.0169), with Day 4 and Day 5 greater than Day 1 (Figure 2). Intravenous salbutamol caused a 33% decrease in Rp compared with the presalbutamol value (p = 0.0313), but was not significantly different from the original baseline Rp on Day 1 (p = 1.00).
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Reactivity to hypocapnia on Day 1 in the wedge airways,
expressed as Rp-CO2 and
Rp-CO2, was 4.06 ± 0.99 and 3.07 ± 0.75 cm H2O/ml/s respectively. Neither parameter changed
significantly with repeated daily bronchoscopy (p = 0.296 and
p = 0.056, respectively). Rp-CO2 in the 4×DAC airways was
2.88 ± 0.49 cm H2O/ml/s on Day 1, and increased with repeated DAC (p < 0.001) (Figure 3A). Rp-CO2 on Day 3, Day 4, and Day 5 was significantly greater than that on Day 1.
Rp-CO2
in the 4×DAC airways was 2.14 ± 0.40 cm H2O/ml/s on Day 1, and increased significantly on Days 4 and 5 (p = 0.003) (Figure 3B).
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Reactivity to aerosolized histamine on Day 1 in the wedge
airways, expressed as RpHist and
RpHist, was 2.04 ± 0.85 and
1.05 ± 0.43 cm H2O/ml/s, respectively. Neither parameter
changed significantly with repeated daily bronchoscopy (p = 0.106 and p = 0.078, respectively) (Figure 4). RpHist in the
4×DAC airways was 1.48 ± 0.35 cm H2O/ml/s on Day 1, and
increased with repeated DAC (p = 0.00287). RpHist values on
Day 3, Day 4, and Day 5 were significantly greater than that
on Day 1 (Figure 4A).
RpHist in the 4×DAC airways was
0.74 ± 0.24 cm H2O/ml/s on Day 1, but did not change significantly with repeated DAC (p = 0.515) (Figure 4B). In contrast to aerosolized histamine, repeated DAC significantly increased reactivity to intravenous histamine challenge from
0.56 ± 0.12 cm H2O/ml/s on Day 1 to 1.42 ± 0.28 cm H2O/ml/s
on Day 5 (Figure 5).
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Repeated DAC of peripheral airways resulted in an increase in the peak response to DAC. RpDAC on Day 1 was
1.40 ± 0.25 cm H2O/ml/s and increased with repeated challenge (p = 0.00236). RpDAC was significantly higher than Day 1 on Day 3, Day 4, and Day 5.
RpDAC was 0.66 ± 0.17 cm H2O/
ml/s, and did not change over the duration of the protocol.
Repeated bronchoscopy had no significant effects on
BALF cell and mediator profiles. However, repeated daily
DAC resulted in dose-dependent airway inflammation when
compared with repeated bronchoscopy without DAC (Figure
6). Compared with BALF from wedge airways, BALF from
4×DAC (n = 7) airways had increased concentrations of macrophages (p = 0.0246), neutrophils (p = 0.004), and eosinophils (p = 0.0104). BALF from 2×DAC airways (n = 6) had
increased concentrations of macrophages (p = 0.0246) and neutrophils (p = 0.004) when compared with BALF from wedge airways. Concentrations of LTB4, PGD2, PGE2, PGF2
, and TXB2
were not significantly increased in airways receiving daily repeated DAC (Figures 7 and 8). However, concentrations of
LTC4, LTD4, and LTE4 in 4×DAC and 2×DAC were higher
than in BALF from wedge airways (p = 0.0144).
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For the purposes of performing correlation analysis, baseline Rp on Day 1 was subtracted from the baseline Rp on subsequent days, and expressed as the change from Day 1 (RpDay5). RpDay5 was positively correlated with BALF macrophages (Spearman's rank correlation coefficient [rs] = 0.593, p = 0.0075), neutrophils (rs = 0.590, p = 0.0079), and LTC4, LTD4, and LTE4 (rs = 0.507, p = 0.0314). RpDay5 was not significantly correlated with any other BALF parameter.
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DISCUSSION |
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Peripheral airway hyperventilation every 48 h for 2 wk was
previously shown to result in obstruction in canine peripheral airways (7). In this study we demonstrate that more frequent hyperventilation challenge results in a more rapid development of airways obstruction (Figure 1), and in peripheral airways that are hyperreactive to hypocapnia (Figure 3) and histamine (Figure 5). We also show for the first time that repeated hyperventilation increases the concentration of sulfidopeptide leukotrienes 24 h after the last DAC (Figure 7), which may contribute
to the airway obstruction (Figure 1), as well as the apparent
functional antagonism to
2-agonists that develops (Figure 2).
It is important to note that the increase in baseline Rp is unlikely to result from repeated bronchoscopy, because baseline
resistance remained remarkably constant in the unchallenged
control bronchi. Rather, the persistent airway obstruction appears to be an extension of the DAC-induced late phase (5)
that is exacerbated by subsequent repeated challenges.
The increase in baseline Rp is reminiscent of the functional changes that characterize asthma (10), and reflects alterations in airway structure and function that result from repetitive hyperventilation with cool dry air (11). Morphologic changes found 24 h after a single DAC include mucosal damage, bronchovascular leakage, and granulocyte influx in the airway lamina propria (5). Many of these changes are also present 24 h after repeated DAC (11), and may explain the airway obstruction observed in this study. In addition, the increased concentrations of bronchospastic mediators (Figure 7) and accumulation of intraluminal exudate may contribute to airway narrowing. Although the relative importance of each of these mechanisms is unknown, it is likely that all of them play some role in the development of repeated DAC-induced airway obstruction.
Data from the intravenous salbutamol study provided valuable insights regarding the causes of airway obstruction that
occur in response to repeated DAC. In naive canine airways,
there is baseline smooth muscle tone that is blocked by intravenous salbutamol, resulting in a 46% decrease in Rp. If repeated DAC-induced airway obstruction was completely reversible by a
2 agonist, then postsalbutamol airway resistance
on Day 5 should have been approximately 0.34 cm H2O/ml/s
(a 46% decrease in the Day 1 baseline). On the other hand,
even if repeated DAC-induced airway obstruction was due only to morphologic factors (increased luminal debris or encroachment of the lumen by thickened lamina propria) with
no contribution by bronchospasm, the same degree of salbutamol-induced relaxation would still result in a 21% decrease
relative to the Day 1 baseline, or 0.50 cm H2O/ml/s. The fact
that salbutamol produced only a 33% reduction in Rp, and resulted in a baseline resistance that was 11% higher rather than
46% lower than that recorded on Day 1, suggests that airways
subjected to repeated DAC have impaired smooth muscle responsiveness to
2-agonists (12). We believe that these data
represent the first report of functional antagonism developing
in response to repetitive hyperventilation of cold dry air.
Repeated DAC could reduce the response of airway
smooth muscle to
-agonists in several ways. First, salbutamol
results in smooth muscle relaxation by inhibiting extracellular
influx of Ca++. It is possible that the increased concentrations
of leukotrienes measured in this study (Figure 7) resulted in
functional antagonism through the release of intracellular
Ca++ stores, thus causing persistent smooth muscle constriction. Second, the bronchial epithelium has been shown to
modulate the relaxing properties of adrenergic agents, with
the attenuation of relaxation in airways denuded of their epithelium (13). Thus, decreased sensitivity to salbutamol may be
related to the persistence of DAC-induced mucosal damage
reported in other studies using this model (11). Third, tissue
edema outside the airway smooth muscle was shown to limit
smooth muscle relaxation in sheep (14). Further investigation
is necessary to determine the relative roles of airway smooth
muscle and airway wall thickening in repeated DAC-induced airway obstruction.
The reactivity to hypocapnia significantly increased with repeated DAC, thus demonstrating that airways subjected to repeated DAC become hyperreactive (Figure 3). Increased reactivity to hypocapnia presumably results from either changes in the smooth muscle cell that favors pH-induced contraction, thickening of the airway wall, or intraluminal debris that would amplify the effects of smooth muscle constriction (15, 16). We have shown that repeated DAC causes increased lamina propria thickness and increased intraluminal debris (11), so it seems likely that these factors contribute to the hyperreactivity measured in this study. Despite this, we did not measure increased reactivity to aerosolized histamine (Figure 4). The physiologic effect of agonists administered through the airway lumen depends in part on the integrity and permeability of the airway epithelium (17). The washout of dissolved CO2 in the tissue during the hypocapnic challenge and the subsequent contractile stimulus to the airway smooth muscle is not as dependent upon mucosal permeability as is aerosolized histamine. The stratified squamous epithelium found in repeated DAC bronchi (11) may decrease the penetration of histamine into the airway wall. Additionally, intra-airway mucus (such as that observed in this study) may blunt the reactivity of airways to aerosolized agonists, probably through a barrier effect (18). This suspicion was subsequently confirmed in Protocol B, in which airway reactivity to intravenous histamine challenge on Day 5 was increased approximately 2.5 fold when compared with responsiveness on Day 1 (Figure 5).
The hypothesized mechanisms leading to DAC-induced inflammatory cell infiltration (Figure 6) are based upon the airway drying that occurs during the DAC. Hyperpnea with dry air increases the osmolality of the airway lining fluid and probably the underlying tissues (19). Both mast cells (20) and bronchial epithelial cells (21) have been shown to be osmotically sensitive. Mast cells are known to degranulate in response to DAC (5) and are capable of producing cytokines critical for macrophage and granulocyte influx (22). On the other hand, osmotically stimulated bronchial epithelium produces interleukin-8 (21), an important chemokine for neutrophils (23). Thus, stimulation of mast cells or bronchial epithelial cells during each DAC may initiate the cellular influx observed in this and previous studies.
Leukotrienes may play a prominent role in repeated DAC-induced airway obstruction (Figure 7). The sulfidopeptide leukotrienes are powerful spasmogens of airway smooth muscle (24), and thus have the potential to increase airway resistance through bronchoconstriction. Leukotrienes also may contribute to increased airway resistance by stimulating the secretion of mucus into the airway lumen (24). In addition to a direct role, the sulfidopeptide leukotrienes may play an indirect role in airway obstruction through the potentiation of tachykinin release from airway sensory nerves (25). Thus, the increased BALF concentrations of sulfidopeptide leukotrienes recovered 24 h after repeated DAC (Figure 7), as well as the significant correlation between these concentrations and the change in airway resistance, highlight a probable role for these mediators in the obstruction we observed in this study.
In conclusion, our findings support the hypothesis that repeated hyperventilation of cold dry air, such as that experienced by elite winter athletes, may contribute to the development of airways disease (1), not just the exacerbation of asthma. Repetitive exposure of canine peripheral airways to unconditioned
air results in airway inflammation, obstruction, hyperreactivity,
and impaired smooth muscle responsiveness to
-adrenergic
drugs. The cause of the airway obstruction is probably multifactorial, including airway exudate, increased airway wall thickening, and increased smooth muscle tone. Repetitive bouts of
cooling and drying in the lung periphery results in remodeling
of the airway mucosa (11) and these changes may account for
the higher incidence of airways hyperreactivity reported in athletes who routinely participate in strenuous winter sports (1).
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Footnotes |
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Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Arthur N. Freed, Ph.D., Review Branch, Division of Extramural Affairs, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Two Rockledge Center, Suite 7190, 6701 Rockledge Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892-7924. E-mail: freeda{at}nhlbi.nih.gov
(Received in original form March 13, 2000 and in revised form January 23, 2001).
A. N. Freed wrote this paper in his private capacity. The views expressed in the paper do not necessarily represent the views of NIH, DHHS, nor the government of the United States.Acknowledgments: The authors acknowledge the superb technical assistance of Sharron McCulloch and Teresa Myers.
Supported by NIH-NHLBI Grants HL09594, HL63186, and HL07534-13.
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