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Divisions of 1 Clinical Immunology and 2 Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Asthma & Allergy Center, Baltimore, Maryland 21224-6801
We investigated whether hyperosmolar saline
(HS), applied via paper disk onto the septum of one nostril, induces a
nasal secretory response. Furthermore, we examined whether this
response is accentuated in patients with active allergic rhinitis (AR)
compared with healthy volunteers. Unilateral HS produced significant
nasal secretions both ipsilateral and contralateral to the site of
challenge in the AR group and only ipsilaterally in the healthy group.
The HS-induced nasal secretions were significantly greater in the AR
vs. the healthy subjects. In a separate study, we ascertained that the
nasal response to HS is neurally mediated and found that ipsilateral
nerve blockade with lidocaine significantly attenuates the HS-induced
secretions bilaterally. In another group of AR subjects, we determined
whether nociceptive fibers were involved in this response and found
that sensory nerve desensitization with repeated application of
capsaicin attenuated the HS-induced nasal secretions. Finally, we
determined whether the secretory hyperresponsiveness in AR is
attributable to increased reactivity of submucosal glands rather than
of nerves. We found that the dose response to methacholine, which
directly stimulates the glands, was identical among AR and healthy
subjects. We conclude that, in AR, nasal challenge with HS induces
significantly greater reflex secretions involving capsaicin-sensitive
nerve fibers, consistent with the notion of neural hyperresponsiveness
in this disease.
capsaicin; lidocaine; methacholine
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