Controlled Comparison of the Bronchodilator Effects of Three P-Adrenergic Stimulant Drugs Administered by Inhalation to Patients with Asthma

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Abstract

In a double-blind trial of the effect of inhaling three different β-adrenergic stimulants (isoprenaline sulphate 1,000 μ g. orciprenaline sulphate 1,500 μg. and salbutamol 200 μg.) and a placebo on ventilatory function in 24 patients with chronic asthma salbutamol was found to have a much longer action than isoprenaline, and it produced a slightly more intense and prolonged effect than orciprenaline. In a double-blind subjective assessment 13 of the 24 patients selected salbutamol as the most effective preparation, while only five preferred isoprenaline and three orciprenaline. Hence salbutamol, given by inhalation, may prove to be the most effective drug at present available for the short-term relief of asthmatic symptoms. © 1969, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

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Choo-Kang, Y. F. J., Simpson, W. T., & Grant, I. W. B. (1969). Controlled Comparison of the Bronchodilator Effects of Three P-Adrenergic Stimulant Drugs Administered by Inhalation to Patients with Asthma. British Medical Journal, 2(5652), 287–289. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.5652.287

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