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Latest Asthma Research
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New Research Study Sheds
Light On Late Phase Of Asthma Attacks
August 13, 2011
New research led by scientists from Imperial College London
explains why around half of people with asthma experience a
'late phase' of symptoms several hours after exposure to
allergens. The findings, published in the journal Thorax, could
lead to better treatments for the disease.
An estimated 300 million people suffer from asthma, and the
prevalence is rising. Symptoms are commonly triggered by
allergens in the environment, such as pollen and dust mites.
These stimuli can cause the airways to tighten within minutes,
causing breathing difficulties which range from mild to severe.
Many sufferers also experience a 'late asthmatic response' three
to eight hours after exposure to allergens, causing breathing
difficulties which can last up to 24 hours.
In the early asthmatic response, the allergen is recognised by
mast cells, which release chemical signals that cause the
airways to narrow. In contrast, the mechanism behind the late
phase has remained unclear.
In research on mice and rats, the Imperial team have now found
evidence that the late asthmatic response happens because the
allergen triggers sensory nerves in the airways. These nerves
activate reflexes which trigger other nerves that release the
neurotransmitter acetylcholine, which causes the airways to
narrow. If the findings translate to humans, it would mean that
drugs that block acetylcholine called anticholinergics could be
used to treat asthma patients that experience late phase
responses following exposure to allergens.
Steroids are the main treatments for asthma prescribed now, but
they are not effective for all patients. A recent clinical trial
involving 210 asthma patients found that the anticholinergic
drug tiotropium improved symptoms when added to a steroid
inhaler, but the reason for this was unexplained.
"Many asthmatics have symptoms at night after exposure to
allergens during the day, but until now we haven't understood
how this late response is brought about," said Professor Maria
Belvisi, from the National Heart and Lung Institute at Imperial
College London, who led the research. "Our study in animals
suggests that anticholinergic drugs might help to alleviate
these symptoms, and this is supported by the recent clinical
data. We are seeking funding to see if these findings are
reproduced in proof of concept clinical studies in asthmatics."
The researchers hypothesised that sensory nerves were involved
after observing that anaesthesia prevented the late asthmatic
response in mice and rats. They succeeded in blocking the late
asthmatic response using drugs that block different aspects of
sensory nerve cell function, adding further evidence for this
idea.
After establishing that sensory nerves detect the allergen, the
researchers tested the effect of tiotropium, an anticholinergic
drug that is used to treat chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease. Tiotropium blocks the receptor for acetylcholine, which
is released by nerves in the parasympathetic nervous system.
Tiotropium also blocked the late asthmatic response, suggesting
that parasympathetic nerves cause the airways to constrict.
The study was funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC).
Professor Stephen Holgate, MRC funding board chair and an expert
on asthma, said: "Unravelling the complex biology of asthma is
vitally important, as it is an extremely dangerous condition
which exerts lifelong damaging effects. The Medical Research
Council is committed to research that opens doors to improving
disease resilience, particularly in conditions which attack our
body over the long-term. Studies like this are making really
important progress and whilst we must always be cautious when
taking findings from rodents into humans, these are very
interesting and potentially important results."
Sources: Imperial College London, AlphaGalileo
Foundation.
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