Thorax
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Effects of the long acting beta agonist formoterol on asthma control in asthmatic patients using inhaled corticosteroids. The Netherlands and Canadian Formoterol Study Investigators.
The long acting beta 2 agonist formoterol has proved to be an effective bronchodilator with a prolonged action of 12-14 hours. However, the precise role of formoterol in the maintenance treatment of asthma is still under debate. A study was performed to investigate the efficacy and safety of treatment with formoterol for six months in subjects with asthma. ⋯ Adding formoterol 24 micrograms twice daily by Turbohaler to inhaled corticosteroids was effective in improving symptom scores and morning PEF, and decreasing the use of rescue beta 2 agonists. There was no apparent loss of asthma control during 24 weeks of treatment with formoterol.
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It has been suggested that oxidative stress contributes to lung injury in cystic fibrosis. There is, however, no direct evidence of increased pulmonary oxidative stress in cystic fibrosis nor of the effects of inflammation on the major pulmonary antioxidant, glutathione. A study was undertaken to measure these parameters in infants and young children in the presence or absence of pulmonary inflammation. ⋯ These results demonstrate that the airways in patients with cystic fibrosis are exposed to increased oxidative stress which appears to be a consequence of pulmonary inflammation rather than part of the primary cystic fibrosis defect. The increase in gamma-GT in the CF-I group suggests a mechanism by which extracellular glutathione could be utilised by airway epithelial cells.
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Case Reports
Neuromuscular blockade with acute respiratory failure in a patient receiving cibenzoline.
Cibenzoline is a class Ic antiarrhythmic agent that can be used to treat supraventricular arrhythmias. A case is reported of cibenzoline overdose in a patient with impaired renal function, leading not only to the usual cardiac and metabolic symptoms (bradycardia and hypoglycaemia), but also to a myastheniform syndrome with acute respiratory failure. ⋯ Muscle strength recovered as serum cibenzoline levels decreased, allowing the patient to be weaned from the ventilator. This observation suggests that cibenzoline, like other antiarrhythmic agents, can be responsible for neuromuscular blockade, and should therefore be used with caution in patients with neuromuscular and respiratory diseases or with impaired renal function.