Paper
Albuterol protects against exercise-induced asthma longer than metaproterenol sulfate.
Published Feb 1, 1986 · E. Schwartz, D. Bukstein, M. Grunstein
Pediatrics
35
Citations
2
Influential Citations
Abstract
Both metaproterenol sulfate and albuterol are inhaled medications commonly used to prevent exercise-induced bronchospasm. Their efficacy and duration of action in controlling exercise-induced bronchospasm were compared with placebo in 18 asthmatic children (age range: 12 to 17 years) in a single-blind randomized crossover study. Standardized treadmill exercise challenges were repeated every two hours for up to six hours following the initial exercise test. With the initial exercise challenge, both active medications blocked exercise-induced bronchospasm with equal efficacy. On the other hand, when the duration of action of the medications was compared: albuterol blocked exercise-induced bronchospasm longer than metaproterenol sulfate in eight subjects, the reverse was true in only one patient, and the medications blocked for equal duration in nine subjects. Thus, although both active agents were equally efficacious in blocking exercise-induced bronchospasm initially, the duration of action of albuterol was significantly (P less than .05) longer on serial testing than that of metaproterenol sulfate. Both medications were significantly better than placebo in efficacy and duration of action.
Albuterol has a longer duration of action in preventing exercise-induced asthma than metaproterenol sulfate, but both medications are equally effective in preventing exercise-induced bronchospasm in asthmatic children.
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