Distribution of pulmonary responsiveness to aerosol histamine in dogs

Abstract
Dose-response curves to aerosol histamine in 102 anesthetized, intubated, spontaneously breathing dogs revealed a spectrum of airway responsiveness with a greater than 40-fold difference between the most and the least sensitive animals. The frequency distribution of responses fits a log normal distribution. No correlation was found between sex, age, or control values of dynamic compliance (Cdyn) and lung resistance (RL) and the dose of histamine required to cause a response. Repetitive studies in 17 dogs observed for up to 20 mo showed that the dose at which an individual dog would respond was reproducible within a narrow range and that the differences between dogs were highly significant (P greater than 0.001). The long-term reproducibility of the response to aerosol histamine in individual dogs suggests that short-term reversible airway insults are not responsible for the range in responses noted between animals.