Medical Hypotheses
Volume 74, Issue 3 , Pages 521-523, March 2010

Increased vagal airway tone in fatal asthma

MedImmune, LLC, Clinical Development, One MedImmune Way, Office # 45C20, Gaithersburg, MD 20854, USA

Received 1 October 2009; accepted 8 October 2009. published online 11 November 2009.

Summary 

Slow-onset asthma deaths are characterized by eosinophilic airway infiltrates and thickening of the basal membrane, while rapid-onset asthma deaths are associated with fewer airway inflammatory changes, suggesting that bronchospasm may be responsible for the latter events.

Airway tone is primarily controlled by the autonomous nervous system and can be pharmacologically modified. Therapies that stimulate the sympathetic β2 adrenoreceptor or inhibit the muscarinic receptor signal transduction induce bronchodilation. Parasympathetic (vagal) airway tone is enhanced in some asthmatics due to a number of stimuli, while in others it is constitutively heightened. Mainstream asthma therapy, however, only consists of corticosteroids and β2 agonists, not addressing this aspect.

In this publication, I propose that increased vagal airway tone resulting in overwhelming bronchoconstriction and mucus plugging could be responsible for the near-fatal or fatal events observed in a number of asthmatics, in spite of their adequate treatment with standard therapies. On the basis of this hypothesis, I recommend that vagal airway tone be assessed in all patients with asthma, particularly in those with a history of near-fatal events. If the airway tone is increased, individuals should be treated with a triple combination of long-acting β2 agonists, inhaled steroids, and inhaled anticholinergics to prevent vagally mediated fatal events.

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PII: S0306-9877(09)00673-2

doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2009.10.002

Medical Hypotheses
Volume 74, Issue 3 , Pages 521-523, March 2010