Understanding allergic asthma from allergen inhalation tests

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Abstract

The allergen challenge has evolved, in less than 150 years, from a crude tool used to document the etiology of allergen-induced disease to a well-controlled tool used today to investigate the pathophysiology and pharmacotherapy of asthma. Highlights of the authors' involvement with the allergen challenge include confirmation of the immunoglobulin E-dependence of the late asthmatic response, importance of (nonallergic) airway hyper-responsiveness as a determinant of the airway response to allergen, identification of allergen-induced increase in airway hyper-responsiveness, documentation of beta2-agonist-induced increase in airway response to allergen (including eosinophilic inflammation), advances in understanding the pathophysiology and kinetics of allergen-induced airway responses, and development of a muticentre clinical trial group devoted to using the allergen challenge for investigating promising new therapeutic strategies for asthma. © 2007 Pulsus Group Inc. All rights reserved.

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Cockcroft, D. W., Hargreave, F. E., O’Byrne, P. M., & Boulet, L. P. (2007). Understanding allergic asthma from allergen inhalation tests. Canadian Respiratory Journal, 14(7), 414–418. https://doi.org/10.1155/2007/753450

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