Abstract
Healthy adult volunteers (n = 122), who denied personal history of lung disease or family history of cystic fibrosis or asthma, took no interfering medications, and had forced expiratory volume in 1 s greater than or equal to 80% predicted, underwent methacholine challenge and pupillary reactivity testing. Pupil diameter measured in dark and light test conditions declined with age (Pearson's r = -0.54 and -0.36). Pupillary alpha-adrenergic responsiveness (expressed as the concentration of phenylephrine required to dilate the pupil 1 mm) was significantly correlated with age. Older subjects required lower concentrations for dilation and therefore were more sensitive to phenylephrine. Pupillary cholinergic responsiveness (the concentration of carbachol required for 1-mm constriction) was not significantly correlated with age. Therefore the significantly smaller baseline pupil size in the elderly cannot be explained by failure of alpha-adrenergic receptor responses or by increased pupillary cholinergic responsiveness. We found no significant correlation of methacholine bronchial reactivity with age. In addition, there was no relation between airway reactivity and pupillary alpha-adrenergic or cholinergic responsiveness in this sample of healthy adults. These findings, taken with others in the literature, suggest that the contribution of alpha-adrenergic and cholinergic responsiveness to nonspecific airway reactivity in healthy persons is small, if it exists at all, and that there is no significant change in airway reactivity with age in healthy adults.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
23 articles.
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