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(J Appl Physiol 101: 30-39 @ 2006. First published February 9, 2006; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.01190.2005

8750-7587/06 The structural basis of airways hyperresponsiveness in asthma

Robert H. Brown,1,2,3 David B. Pearse,3 George Pyrgos,3 Mark C. Liu,3,4 Alkis Togias,3,4 and Solbert Permutt3

1Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, 2Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Division of Physiology, Department of Medicine, 3Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and 4Division of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland

Submitted 19 September 2005 ; accepted in final form 1 February 2006)

We hypothesized that structural airway remodeling contributes to airways hyperresponsiveness (AHR) in asthma. Small, medium, and large airways were analyzed by computed tomography in 21 asthmatic volunteers under baseline conditions (FEV1 = 64% predicted) and after maximum response to albuterol (FEV1 = 76% predicted). The difference in pulmonary function between baseline and albuterol was an estimate of AHR to the baseline smooth muscle tone (BSMT). BSMT caused an increase in residual volume (RV) that was threefold greater than the decrease in forced vital capacity (FVC) because of a simultaneous increase in total lung capacity (TLC). The decrease in FVC with BSMT was the major determinant of the baseline FEV1 (P < 0.0001). The increase in RV correlated inversely with the relaxed luminal diameter of the medium airways (P = 0.009) and directly with the wall thickness of the large airways (P = 0.001). The effect of BSMT on functional residual capacity (FRC) controlled the change in TLC relative to the change in RV. When the FRC increased with RV, TLC increased and FVC was preserved. When the relaxed large airways were critically narrowed, FRC and TLC did not increase and FVC fell. With critical large airways narrowing, the FRC was already elevated from dynamic hyperinflation before BSMT and did not increase further with BSMT. FEV1/FVC in the absence of BSMT correlated directly with large airway luminal diameter and inversely with the fall in FVC with BSMT. These findings suggest that dynamic hyperinflation caused by narrowing of large airways is a major determinant of AHR in asthma.
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