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Physiology of Cough in Asthma: Comparison of Sensory-Mechanical Responses to Mannitol and Methacholine Challenge Tests

D

Dr. Diane Lougheed

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cough Variant Asthma
Asthma

Treatments

Other: mannitol challenge test
Drug: high-dose methacholine challenge test

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01064245
2010-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

Cough is a common, disruptive and at times disabling symptom which often prompts patients to seek medical attention. Determining the cause(s) of chronic cough can be challenging, and costly. Asthma and other airway disorders are among the most common causes of chronic cough; and cough can be the sole symptom of asthma. Little is known about why some patients with asthma primarily cough and do not develop the other symptoms of asthma such as shortness of breath or wheeze. Improved understanding of the reasons for these different manifestations may lead to new and more effective treatment strategies. We have notices differences in pressure measurements inside the chest in patients who mostly cough during induced bronchoconstriction, which might be part of the explanation for varying symptoms. This study will compare lung mechanical responses during methacholine and mannitol-induced induced airway narrowing between typical asthma, cough variant asthma (CVA) and an airway inflammatory disorder that is not asthma.The purpose of this research is to explore the pathophysiology and sensory-mechanics of cough in individuals with asthma, CVA and methacholine-induced cough but normal airway sensitivity using mannitol and high-dose methacholine bronchoprovocation testing.

Enrollment

29 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Subjects with asthma or suspected CVA who have previously participated in or who have expressed interest in participating in studies will be invited to participate in the study. Previous treatment with inhaled or systemic corticosteroids is not an exclusion criterion, but medication use will be recorded and examined in the analysis.

Exclusion criteria

  1. An exacerbation necessitating any alteration in medication, emergency department visit or hospitalizations within the previous 4 weeks;

  2. Inability to perform acceptable quality spirometry;

  3. Medical contraindications to methacholine challenge testing 35, including:

    1. Severe airflow limitation (FEV1 <50% predicted or <1.0 L);
    2. Heart attack or stroke in last 3 months;
    3. Uncontrolled hypertension, systolic BP > 200 or diastolic BP > 100;
    4. Known aortic aneurysm;
    5. Moderate airflow limitation < 60% predicted or <1.5 L);
    6. Inability to perform acceptable quality spirometry;
    7. Current use of cholinesterase inhibitor medication (for myasthenia gravis); and
    8. Pregnant or nursing mothers.
  4. Smoking history in excess of 10 pack years;

  5. Medical contraindications to mannitol challenge testing, including:

    1. Aortic or cerebral aneurysm;
    2. Uncontrolled hypertension; and
    3. Myocardial infarction or a cerebral vascular accident in the previous six months).
  6. Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding because the effects of a possible hyperresponsiveness reaction to mannitol in mothers and/or fetuses are unknown and many compounds are excreted in human milk therefore caution should be taken.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

29 participants in 2 patient groups

Cough Variant Asthma
Experimental group
Description:
Those diagnosed with cough variant asthma.
Treatment:
Drug: high-dose methacholine challenge test
Other: mannitol challenge test
Asthma
Experimental group
Description:
Those with diagnosed asthma.
Treatment:
Drug: high-dose methacholine challenge test
Other: mannitol challenge test

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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