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. 1980 Jan 5;280(6206):16–18. doi: 10.1136/bmj.280.6206.16

Asthma induced by enkephalin.

R D Leslie, D Bellamy, D A Pyke
PMCID: PMC1600545  PMID: 7357255

Abstract

A total of 291 diabetics were studied to see whether an asthmatic reaction was associated with facial flushing induced by chlorpropamide and alcohol. Of these patients, 191 reported facial flushing, of whom 12 reported breathlessness as well. Of these 12, five also described wheezing, and respiratory function tests showed them to have asthma. Three of these five patients underwent further tests, which showed that the asthmatic reaction could be prevented by giving disodium cromoglycate and the specific opiate antagonist naloxone. One patient developed wheezing when given an enkephalin analogue with opiate-like activity. Asthma induced by chlorpropamide and alcohol was concluded to be mediated by endogenous peptides with opiate-like activity such as enkephalin.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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