Volume 45, Issue 11 , Pages 1323-1325, November 1996
An accelerated increase of plasma adrenomedullin in acute asthma☆
Abstract
A novel vasorelaxant peptide, adrenomedullin (AM), has been isolated from the acid extract of human pheochromocytoma. We have recently shown that AM inhibits histamine- and acetylcholine-induced bronchoconstriction in anesthetized guinea pigs in vivo, and this bronchodilatory effect is long-lasting. Here, we measured plasma AM concentrations in nine patients with an acute attack of bronchial asthma. The results were compared with values in 30 age-matched normal control subjects and seven age-matched stable asthmatic patients. The mean AM concentrations of patients with an acute asthma attack (98 ± 22 pg/mL) were clearly higher than those of normal control subjects (18 ± 2 pg/mL) and stable asthmatic patients (21 ± 3 pg/mL). Reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) showed that the major component of plasma immunoreactive AM in patients with an asthma attack and in normal subjects equally corresponded to authentic human AM(1–52). Our results suggest that plasma AM is markedly increased in many of the patients during an acute attack of bronchial asthma, but it is not observed in stable asthmatic patients. Although this report is preliminary, the observed increase of circulating AM during an acute asthma attack may represent a compensatory mechanism against the bronchoconstriction, probably through its bronchodilatory action.
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☆ Supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture, Japan (572-690-231-646).
PII: S0026-0495(96)90109-2
© 1996 Published by Elsevier Inc.
Volume 45, Issue 11 , Pages 1323-1325, November 1996
