Endogenous airway acidification. Implications for asthma pathophysiology - PubMed (original) (raw)
Endogenous airway acidification. Implications for asthma pathophysiology
J F Hunt et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2000 Mar.
Abstract
Airway concentrations of many reactive nitrogen and oxygen species are high in asthma. The stability and bioactivities of these species are pH-dependent; however, the pH of the airway during acute asthma has not previously been studied. As with gastric and urinary acidification, asthmatic airway acidification could be expected dramatically to alter the concentrations and bioactivities/cytotoxicities of endogenous nitrogen oxides. Here, we demonstrate that the pH of deaerated exhaled airway vapor condensate is over two log orders lower in patients with acute asthma (5.23 +/- 0.21, n = 22) than in control subjects (7.65 +/- 0.20, n = 19, p < 0. 001) and normalizes with corticosteroid therapy. Values are highly reproducible, unaffected by salivary or therapeutic artifact, and identical to samples taken directly from the lower airway. Further, at these low pH values, the endogenous airway compound, nitrite, is converted to nitric oxide (NO) in quantities sufficient largely to account for the concentrations of NO in asthmatic expired air, and eosinophils undergo accelerated necrosis. We speculate that airway pH may be an important determinant of expired NO concentration and airway inflammation, and suggest that regulation of airway pH has a previously unsuspected role in asthma pathophysiology.
Comment in
- NO waiting to exhale in asthma.
Marshall HE, Stamler JS. Marshall HE, et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2000 Mar;161(3 Pt 1):685-7. doi: 10.1164/ajrccm.161.3.16134. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2000. PMID: 10712303 No abstract available. - Endogenous airway acidification: implications for asthma pathology.
Effros RM. Effros RM. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2001 Jan;163(1):293-4. doi: 10.1164/ajrccm.163.1.16310c. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2001. PMID: 11208662 No abstract available.
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