Direct bronchoprovocation test methods: history 1945-2018.

Expert Rev Respir Med

a Division of Respirology, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine , University of Saskatchewan.

Published: March 2019


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Introduction: Bronchoprovocation inhalation challenge tests with direct acting stimuli (e.g. methacholine) are widely used clinically to aid in the diagnosis of asthma. Areas covered: The history of direct challenges with histamine and muscarinic agonists is reviewed. This began with parenteral administration of stimuli with responses monitored clinically and by VC, progressing to inhalation dose-response challenges monitored by FEV and FEV/VC ratio, both (the challenge method and the technology to measure FEV) developed by Robert Tiffeneau in the mid-1940s. Careful standardization of methods has become appreciated albeit after-the-fact. Recent guidelines recommend standardizing the methacholine PD at 400 μg above which a methacholine challenge is considered negative.

Conclusions: The methacholine inhalation test is highly sensitive for a diagnosis of current asthma when symptoms under evaluation are clinically current and when methacholine is inhaled without deep inhalations. Under these circumstances, a methacholine PD > 400 μg excludes current asthma with reasonable certainty. PD values >25 μg and ≤400 μg will have a variable specificity and positive predictive value for asthma which increases the lower the PD and the higher the pre-test probability for a diagnosis of asthma. A PD ≤25 μg has high specificity and low sensitivity for asthma.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17476348.2019.1568245DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

diagnosis asthma
8
current asthma
8
methacholine
6
asthma
6
direct bronchoprovocation
4
bronchoprovocation test
4
test methods
4
methods history
4
history 1945-2018
4
1945-2018 introduction
4

Similar Publications

Purpose: Given the increased likelihood for individuals with severe asthma to experience comorbidities, disease complications, emergency room visits, and hospitalizations, the ability to stratify asthma populations on severity is often important. Although pharmacoepidemiologic studies using administrative healthcare databases sometimes categorize asthma severity, there is no consensus on an approach.

Methods: Individuals with asthma (≥ 2 ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes J45) aged ≥ 6 years were identified in Optum's de-identified Clinformatics Data Mart Database between January 2017 and November 2023.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Exercise-induced respiratory symptoms limit physical activity and sport performance in adolescents. Etiologies include exercise-induced bronchoconstriction, laryngeal obstruction, dysfunctional breathing, and in rarer cases, large airway obstruction and cardiac pathologies. Accurate diagnosis requires assessment during exercise that elicits the symptoms patients experience in the field.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Little is known about the characteristics of adults with bronchiectasis in France.

Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted to describe the characteristics of adults (≥18 years) with clinically-significant bronchiectasis, diagnosed on a combination of respiratory symptoms and CT scan findings, and followed in 18 participating centers. Data on, etiology, lung function, symptoms, microbiology, treatments and quality of life were collected.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Airway obstruction is a characteristic spirometric finding in asthma but the clinical significance of other abnormal spirometric patterns is less well described. We aimed to explore pre- and post-bronchodilator (BD) prevalences and clinical characteristics of preserved ratio impaired spirometry (PRISm), dysanapsis and airflow obstruction with low forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV) in children diagnosed with asthma.

Methods: We extracted specialist care data (clinical and spirometry) from the Swedish National Airway Register (n=3301, age 5-17 years).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To report a case of eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA) initially presenting as orbital involvement, describe its successful management, and provide a comprehensive literature review.

Case Report: A 33-year-old female patient presented with swelling, redness, tenderness, and a mass under the left upper eyelid for one month. Upper lid eversion showed a multilobulated lesion in the subconjunctival area of the same region.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF