• Chest · May 2013

    Comparative Study

    Mechanisms of decrease in fractional exhaled nitric oxide during acute bronchoconstriction.

    • Ilaria Cattoni, Gabriella Guarnieri, Alessandro Tosetto, Paola Mason, Maria C Scarpa, Marina Saetta, and Piero Maestrelli.
    • Department of Cardiologic, Thoracic and Vascular Sciences, University of Padova, Padova, Italy.
    • Chest. 2013 May 1;143(5):1269-76.

    BackgroundFractional exhaled nitric oxide measured at expiratory flow of 50 mL/s (Feno50), a biomarker of airway inflammation, is affected by changes in airway caliber. Whether a lower Feno50 level during bronchoconstriction is only an artifact due to the strong flow dependence of this parameter is controversial.MethodsWe aimed to evaluate the dynamics of airway and alveolar nitric oxide (NO) during acute bronchoconstriction induced by methacholine. Exhaled NO was measured at expiratory flows of 10, 50, 100, 150, and 250 mL/s before and after metacholine in 26 responders to methacholine and 37 nonresponders. Flow-independent parameters (airway wall NO flux, airway NO diffusing capacity, airway wall NO concentration, alveolar NO concentration) were calculated using a two-compartment model, and correction for NO axial back diffusion was applied.ResultsBronchoconstriction in responders was associated with a decrease in Feno50 (-28%, P < .0001), in airway wall NO flux (-34%, P < .0001), and in airway NO diffusing capacity (-15%, P < .05). In contrast, alveolar NO concentration was not affected by bronchoconstriction. Postmethacholine changes in Feno50 were more strictly related to the ventilation distribution, assessed by single-breath carbon monoxide uptake, than to larger airways caliber, assessed by FEV1. When bronchoconstriction was reversed by salbutamol, airway wall NO flux and airway NO diffusing capacity returned to values comparable to those measured premethacholine.ConclusionsThe changes in airway caliber induced by noninflammatory stimuli alter NO transport in the lung. The changes in NO dynamics are limited to conductive airways and are characterized by a reduction of NO flow to luminal space.

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