Pharmacology Of Airways Obstruction Flashcards
What is asthma?
Chronic inflammatory condition mediated by eosinophil release of IgE that results in airway obstruction due to bronchoconstriction. Shortness of breath, coughing and dyspnoea are characteristics of this condition which can be triggered by allergens or exertion.
What are the structural changes to the airways in asthma?
Chronic asthma which has severely progressed to become irreversible due to oedema, scarring and fibrosis with high eosinophil infiltration The basement membrane thickens as there is epithelial cell transition -> mesenchymal and there is smooth muscle hypertrophy which severely obstructs the airways.
What is the mechanism of asthma?
Environmental trigger stimulates the epithelial cells to express TSLP (thymic Stromal lymphopoietin) and induce Th2 cells activation. These release:
IL-4 for IgE activation which triggers mast cell degranulation.
IL-5 for eosinophil activation that releases inflammatory cytokines and causes endothelial damage.
What are the phases in asthma?
After allergen inhalation there is:
Inhalation phase where IgE activation causes mast cells degranulate and release histamines and cytokines for smooth muscle contraction and airway tightening
Late phase where there is localisation of eosinophils, basophils and neutrophils to the lungs for inflammation and bronchoconstriction.
What are the features of asthma?
Airway hyperresponsiveness
Bronchoconstriction
Airway obstruction
How does bronchoconstriction occur?
Activation of Gq protein coupled receptors on bronchial smooth muscle with increase in intracellular calcium because there is:
a decrease in cAMP via:Histamine on H1 receptor and Leukotrines on CysLT1.
Adenosine acts on A1 receptors.
Acetylcholine acts on M3 Gq protein coupled receptors.
What is the mechanism of COPD?
Macrophages driven response caused by inhalation of irritants like cigarette smoke. This causes epithelial cells to release chemokines for monocytes -> macrophages and recruitment of neutrophils and T lymphocytes. Includes:
Chronic bronchitis
Emphysema
Fibrosis of lungs due to recruitment of fibroblasts
What is the mechanism of chronic bronchitis?
Neutrophils release proteases that cause hypersecretion of mucus by goblet cells that leads to bronchi inflammation and airway obstruction. This results in chronic productive cough as a result of irritants such as smoking that causes hypertrophy
What is the cause of emphysema?
Macrophages, neutrophils and T cells release proteolytic enzymes which cause destruction of the alveolar wall.
What are the classes of drugs to treat asthma?
Beta agonists
Muscarinic antagonists
Leukotriene modifiers
Steroids
Phosphodiesterase inhibitors.
Which medication is used to prevent bronchoconstriction?
Phosphodiesterase inhibitors
Muscarinic antagonists against M3 due to parasympathetic innervation for bronchoconstriction
Beta agonists upregulate the B2 receptor for increase in intracellular cAMP and decrease in Ca2+ to prevent bronchoconstriction.
->SABA: Short acting beta agonists
->LABA: Long acting beta agonists
What are the short-acting beta agonists?
Cause bronchodilaton between 2-6 hours and have a rapid onset of action. Includes salbutamol and terbutaline.
They cause an increase in CAMP on smooth muscle to prevent contraction andbronchsconsmiction.
What are the long acting beta agonists?
Lipophilic with prolonged receptor occupancy of B2 and last 12 hours. Includes salmeterol and formoterol. They should only be used alongside inhaled corticosteroids.
Tiotropium
Salmeterol causes slow and prolonged action.
Formoterol causes rapid and prolonged action and is the preferred drug.
How do leukotriene antagonists work?
Inhibit the CysLT1 receptor for bronchoconstriction of smooth muscle and to reduce eosinophils recruitment. Leukotrienes are produced from arachidionic acid via 5-lipooxygenase activity and should be given in conjunction with steroids, because they do not affect production.
How do inhaled corticosteroids work?
They reduce inflammation by:
Low dose corticosteroids act on glucocorticoid receptors to translocate to the nucleus to decrease histone acetylation for gene transcription of inflammatory mediators
High dose corticosteroids act on glucocorticoid receptors to translocate to the nucleus and act on promoter gene regions for transcription of anti-inflammatory mediators.
How do phosphodiesterase inhibitors work?
They reduce intracellular cAMP by causing breakdown into AMP to induce bronchodilation.
What are the features of inhaled corticosteroids?
Delivered directly to the lungs and so a lower dose and reduced side effects compared to oral corticosteroids so Cushing’s syndrome can be avoided. They are given for uncontrolled asthma, and prescribed with a SABA