4.5 Article

Nitric oxide evaluation in upper and lower respiratory tracts in nasal polyposis

Journal

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGY
Volume 38, Issue 7, Pages 1140-1147

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.2008.03006.x

Keywords

airway hyperresponsiveness; alveolar nitric oxide concentration; deep inspiration; maximum flux of nitric oxide from conducting airway; nasal nitric oxide flux

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Background A decrease in nasal nitric oxide (NO) and an increase in exhaled NO have been demonstrated in patients with nasal polyposis (NP). Objectives The aims were to evaluate the flux of NO from the three compartments of the respiratory tract, namely, upper nasal, lower conducting and distal airways, and to search for relationships between NO parameters and indexes of upper and lower disease activity (bronchial reactivity and obstruction). The effect of medical treatment of polyposis was also evaluated. Methods Seventy patients with polyposis were recruited. At baseline, pulmonary function tests (spirometry, plethysmography, bronchomotor response to deep inspiration using forced oscillation measurement of resistance of respiratory system, methacholine challenge, multiple flow rates of exhaled NO and nasal NO measurements) were performed together with an assessment of polyposis [clinical, endoscopic and computed tomography (CT) scores]. Results Statistical relationships were demonstrated between nasal NO flux and severity scores (clinical: rho = -0.3 1, P = 0.015; endoscopic: rho = -0.57, P < 0.0001; CT: rho = -0.46, P = 0.0005), and between alveolar NO concentration and distal airflow limitation (FEF25-75, rho = -0.32, P = 0.011). Thirty-six patients were assessed after 11 [7-13] (median [interquartile]) months of medical treatment, demonstrating an improvement in clinical and endoscopic scores, an increase in nasal NO flux, a decrease in NO flux from conducting airways, an improvement in the mild airflow limitation (forced expiratory volume in 1s, FEF25-75, even in non-asthmatic patients) and a decrease in the bronchoconstrictor effect of deep inspiration. Conclusions The medical treatment of NP improves both air-way reactivity and obstruction, whatever the presence of asthma, suggesting a functional link between upper and lower airway functions.

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