Loube Jeffrey M, Gidner Sarah, Venezia Jarrett, Ryan Hurley, Neptune Enid R, Mitzner Wayne, Dalesio Nicholas M
Department of Environmental Health and Engineering, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, United States.
Department of Cell Biology & Molecular Genetics, Maryland Pathogen Research Institute, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, United States.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol. 2023 Oct 1;325(4):L500-L507. doi: 10.1152/ajplung.00065.2023. Epub 2023 Aug 29.
The clinical definition of "difficult asthma" has expanded recently to include an ever-growing subset of patients with symptoms that cannot be controlled by conventional means, forcing the medical community to develop innovative therapeutics. Beneficial effects of coffee for subjects with asthma, primarily the effect of methylxanthine components, have long been described. Methylxanthines, including theophylline and caffeine, inhibit phosphodiesterases and downstream cAMP signaling to prevent mast cell degranulation while promoting immunomodulation (Peleman RA, Kips JC, Pauwels RA. 28: 53-56, 1998; Deshpande DA, Wang WCH, McIlmoyle EL, Robinett KS, Schillinger RM, An SS, Sham JSK, Liggett SB. 16: 1299-1304, 2010). Caffeine is also a bitter taste receptor agonist, binding to taste-sensing type 2 receptors (TAS2R) before releasing calcium to hyperpolarize airway smooth muscle membranes, inducing bronchodilation (Workman AD, Palmer JN, Adappa ND, Cohen NA 15: 72, 2015; Devillier P, Naline E, Grassin-Delyle S. 155: 11-21, 2015). Theophylline is conventionally used to treat asthma, whereas, according to the literature, the dosage required for orally administered caffeine has yielded modest improvement (Alfaro TM, Monteiro RA, Cunha RA, Cordeiro CR. 12: 1283-1294, 2018). We sought to determine whether aerosolization of ultrafine caffeine particles (2.5-4 μm) directly to the lungs of susceptible A/J mice challenged with methacholine would improve pulmonary function via forced oscillation technique. In addition, we assessed whether nebulization of caffeine leads to changes in lung pathophysiology and bronchoalveolar lavage cell profiles. We found that mice that received aerosolized caffeine had statistically significant decreases in maximum airway resistance [6.3 vs. 3.9 cmHO·s/mL at 62.5 mg/mL caffeine; confidence interval (CI) = -4.3, -0.4; = 0.02] and significant delays in the time required to reach maximum resistance compared with that of controls (64.7 vs. 172.1 sec at 62.5 mg/mL caffeine, CI = 96.0, 118.9; < 0.0001). Nebulized caffeine yielded a consistent effect on airway hyperresponsiveness at a range of doses without evidence of significant pathology relative to vehicle control. For decades, coffee has been shown to improve symptoms in patients with asthma. One component, theophylline, is conventionally used to treat asthma, whereas the dosage required for orally administered caffeine has yielded modest improvement. We sought to determine whether aerosolization of caffeine directly to the lungs of susceptible A/J mice challenged with methacholine would alter pulmonary function via forced oscillation technique. We found nebulized caffeine yielded a consistent improvement on murine AHR.
“难治性哮喘”的临床定义最近有所扩展,涵盖了越来越多症状无法通过传统方法控制的患者群体,这促使医学界研发创新疗法。长期以来,人们一直认为咖啡对哮喘患者有益,主要是甲基黄嘌呤成分的作用。甲基黄嘌呤,包括茶碱和咖啡因,可抑制磷酸二酯酶和下游环磷酸腺苷(cAMP)信号传导,防止肥大细胞脱颗粒,同时促进免疫调节(Peleman RA, Kips JC, Pauwels RA. 28: 53 - 56, 1998; Deshpande DA, Wang WCH, McIlmoyle EL, Robinett KS, Schillinger RM, An SS, Sham JSK, Liggett SB. 16: