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Naloxone does not alter response to hypercapnia or resistive loading in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Authors:P M Simon  A Pope  K Lahive  R A Steinbrook  R M Schwartzstein  J W Weiss  V Fencl  S E Weinberger
Affiliation:Charles A. Dana Research Institute, Boston, MA.
Abstract:To assess the role of endogenous opioid peptides in ventilatory control in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease, we measured the ventilatory and mouth occlusion pressure responses to hypercapnia and the compensatory response to an inspiratory resistive load in 11 male patients with COPD before and after intravenous administration of naloxone or placebo on 2 separate days. There were no statistically significant differences between naloxone and placebo administration in any index of ventilatory response to CO2 or resistive loading. When an inspiratory resistive load was added during CO2 rebreathing, minute ventilation at PETCO2 = 50 mm Hg in all 11 patients decreased significantly (p less than 0.05) with placebo and naloxone. In response to the inspiratory resistive load, in eight of the 11 patients mouth occlusion pressure (P0.1) did not increase; these eight subjects were classified as noncompensators. Naloxone did not affect the P0.1 response to inspiratory resistive loading, either in the group as a whole or in the subgroup of eight patients classified as noncompensators. Our study was unable to demonstrate that increased activity of endogenous opioid peptides suppresses the ventilatory response to CO2 or resistive loading in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease.
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