The European respiratory journal : official journal of the European Society for Clinical Respiratory Physiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Effect of salmeterol compared with beclomethasone on allergen-induced asthmatic and inflammatory responses.
Salmeterol is a selective long-acting beta 2-agonist bronchodilator considered to have added anti-inflammatory effects, but this is controversial. We investigated the effects of a single dose of salmeterol, 100 micrograms, on the physiological and inflammatory responses to inhaled allergen and compared these with the effects of a single dose of beclomethasone, 500 micrograms, and of placebo. Eight atopic adults with mild stable asthma, treated only with inhaled short-acting beta 2-agonist when needed, attended the laboratory sequentially for screening tests, two single-blind control inhalation tests preceded 30 min by placebo or salmeterol and three allergen inhalation tests preceded by placebo, salmeterol or beclomethasone double-blind in random order. ⋯ In conclusion, whilst salmeterol had no demonstrable anti-inflammatory action in sputum after allergen challenge in asthma, neither did a single dose of the positive anti-inflammatory control, beclomethasone. The latter result excludes a more positive judgement on the possible anti-inflammatory action of salmeterol. However, the results do indicate that potent functional effects of a single dose of salmeterol can mask the airway inflammatory cell influx caused by inhaled allergen.