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Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group logoLink to Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group
. 2007 Mar 13;16(2):71–81. doi: 10.3132/pcrj.2007.00017

Inhalation therapy: an historical review

Mark Sanders 1,2,*
PMCID: PMC6634187  PMID: 17356785

Abstract

Inhalation has been employed as a method for delivering medications for more than two thousand years, and the benefits of delivering medication directly to the affected site — the lungs — have been understood for more than two hundred years. At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, physicians were inventing therapies and experimenting with ideas for devices: it was a time of great creativity. However, by the end of the period the scientist and the regulated pharmaceutical industry had emerged and the role of the physician had been constrained. Few of the devices invented then remain in use today, but many of the principles used are still embodied in modern devices. This review traces the developments produced by the early pioneers who applied their creative thoughts to inhalation therapy, and examines how inhaled drug delivery has progressed. The devices pictured are from www.inhalatorium.com, an online museum of inhalation technologies.

Keywords: Inhalation therapy, History, Asthma, Devices

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (2.7 MB).

Footnotes

The author is employed by Pharmaxis Ltd, holds shares in Innovata plc, and is the creator of www.inhalatorium.com


Articles from Primary Care Respiratory Journal: Journal of the General Practice Airways Group are provided here courtesy of Primary Care Respiratory Society UK/Macmillan Publishers Limited

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