Effects of antihistamines on the lung vascular response to histamine in unanesthetized sheep. Diphenylhydramine prevention of pulmonary edema and increased permeability

26Citations
Citations of this article
7Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

To see whether antihistamines could prevent and reverse histamine induced pulmonary edema and increased lung vascular permeability, the authors compared the effects of a 4 h intravenous infusion of 4 μg/kg per min histamine phosphate on pulmonary hemodynamics, lung lymph flow, lymph and plasma protein content, arterial blood gases, hematocrit and lung water with the effects of an identical histamine infusion given during an infusion of diphenhydramine or metiamide on the same variables in unanesthetized sheep. Histamine caused lymph flow to increase from 6.0±0.5 to 27.0±5.5 (SEM) ml/h (P<0.05), lymph:plasma globulin concentration ratio to increase from 0.62±0.01 to 0.67±0.02 (P<0.05), left atrial pressure to fall from 1±1 to -3±1 cm H2O (P<0.05), and lung lymph clearance of eight protein fractions ranging from 36 to 96 Å molecular radius to increase significantly. Histamine also caused increases in lung water, pulmonary vascular resistance, arterial PCO2, pH, and hematocrit, and decreases in cardiac output and arterial PO2. Diphenhydramine (3 mg/kg before histamine followed by 1.5 mg/kg per h intravenous infusion) completely prevented the histamine effect on hematocrit, lung lymph flow, lymph protein clearance, and lung water content, and reduced histamine effects on arterial blood gases and pH. 6 mg/kg diphenhydramine given at the peak histamine response caused lymph flow and lymph:plasma protein concentration ratios to fall. Metiamide (10 mg/kg per h) did not affect the histamine lymph response. The authors conclude that diphenhydramine can prevent histamine induced pulmonary edema and can prevent and reverse increased lung vascular permeability caused by histamine, and that histamine effects on lung vascular permeability are H1 actions.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Brigham, K. L., Bowers, R. E., & Owen, P. J. (1976). Effects of antihistamines on the lung vascular response to histamine in unanesthetized sheep. Diphenylhydramine prevention of pulmonary edema and increased permeability. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 58(2), 391–398. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI108483

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free