Acoustic rhinometry in the dog:a novel large animal model for studies of nasal congestion
Data(s) |
2002
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Resumo |
The aim of this project was to develop and pharmacologically characterize an experimental dog model of nasal congestion in which nasal patency is measured using acoustic rhinometry. Solubilized compound 48/80 (0.3-3.0%) was administered intranasally to thiopental anesthetized beagle dogs to elicit nasal congestion via localized mast cell degranulation. Compound 48/80-induced effects on parameters of nasal patency were studied in vehicle-treated animals, as well as in the same animals pretreated 2 hours earlier with oral d-pseudoephedrine or chlorpheniramine. Local mast cell degranulation caused a close-related decrease in nasal cavity volume and minimal cross-sectional area (Amin) together with a highly variable increase in nasal secretions. Maximal responses were seen at 90-120 minutes after 48/80 administration. Oral administration of the adrenergic agonist, d-pseudoephedrine (3.0 mg/kg), significantly antagonized all of the nasal effects of compound 48/80 (3.0%). In contrast, oral administration of the histamine H1 receptor antagonist chlorpheniramine (10 mg/kg) appeared to reduce the increased nasal secretions but was without effect on the compound 48/ 80-induced nasal congestion (i.e., volume and Amin). These results show the effectiveness of using acoustic rhinometry in this anesthetized dog model. The observations that compound 48/80-induced nasal congestion was prevented by d-pseudoephedrine pretreatment, but not by chlorpheniramine, suggest that this noninvasive model system may provide an effective tool with which to study the actions of decongestant drugs in preclinical investigations. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Direitos |
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess |
Fonte |
Koss , M C , Yu , Y , Hey , J A & McLeod , R L 2002 , ' Acoustic rhinometry in the dog : a novel large animal model for studies of nasal congestion ' American journal of rhinology , vol 16 , no. 1 , pp. 49-55 . |
Palavras-Chave | #Acoustics #Airway Resistance #Animals #Chlorpheniramine #Disease Models, Animal #Dogs #Drug Interactions #Ephedrine #Male #Nasal Obstruction #Otolaryngology #Probability #Reference Values #Sensitivity and Specificity |
Tipo |
article |