Journal of physiology and pharmacology : an official journal of the Polish Physiological Society
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J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Dec 2008
ReviewSystemic treatment by inhalation of macromolecules--principles, problems, and examples.
Aerosol inhalation is an established route of medical administration for the treatment of pulmonary diseases. In contrast, aerosol inhalation for treatment of systemic diseases is a novel therapeutic approach. Clinical use of the latter therapy for many years has been limited by the lack of accuracy, efficiency, and reproducibility of the administered doses. ⋯ Studies demonstrated that only a small number of morphological factors influence alveolar drug deposition (e.g., exogen allergic alveolitis, active sarcoidosis, active smoking). In consequence, an increasing number of studies investigated the systemic effect of inhaled high molecular weight substances (e.g., insulin, heparin, interleukin-2) and demonstrated that controlled aerosol therapy may serve as a non-invasive alternative for drug application by means of a syringe. Our review briefly summarizes the mechanisms for pulmonary absorption of macromolecules and gives an overview on prior research in the field of inhalant treatment of systemic diseases.