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The effects of intraluminal and extraluminal drug application on secretion and smooth muscle tone in the ferret liquid-filled trachea in vitro

โœ Scribed by S. Kitano; U.M. Wells; S.E. Webber; J.G. Widdicombe


Publisher
Elsevier
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
648 KB
Volume
5
Category
Article
ISSN
0952-0600

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โœฆ Synopsis


With the ferret liquid-filled trachea in vitro, intraluminal methacholine (MCh), phenylephrine (PE) and histamine (Hist) increased smooth muscle tone and salbutamol (Salb) decreased tone. Lysozyme output was increased by intraluminal MCh and PE. Albumin transport into the lumen was not altered by intraluminal Hist, Salb or PE. The concentration-response curves for smooth muscle contraction and for lysozyme output to extraluminal MCh lay to the left of those for intraluminal MCh. Indomethacin shifted the smooth-muscle response curves to MCh significantly to the left but did not significantly alter lysozyme output. Extraluminal MCh produced a concentration-dependent increase in albumin output whilst intraluminal MCh did so in one of three studies. Albumin output in response to MCh was not significantly altered by indomethacin. Thus, MCh has a less potent effect on smooth muscle and lysozyme secretion and, to a lesser extent, on epithelial albumin transport when given intraluminally. This may be because the epithelium restricts diffusion of the drug or due to the production of a non-prostanoid factor which inhibits smooth muscle responsiveness. Smooth muscle responsiveness is enhanced by blocking cyclooxygenase activity, suggesting MCh-induced release of a prostanoid with relaxant activity.


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The effect of hydrogen peroxide on smoot
โœ T. Morikawa; S.E. Webber; J.G. Widdicombe ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1991 ๐Ÿ› Elsevier ๐ŸŒ English โš– 760 KB

The effect of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) was examined on baseline and on methacholine- and phenylephrine-stimulated smooth muscle tone, mucus volume and lysozyme outputs, and epithelial albumin transport of the ferret whole trachea in vitro. H2O2 (10 microM-10 mM) had no significant effect on tracheal