Effect of nifedipine on constriction of human tracheal strips in vitro

Abstract
1 Autopsy specimens of human trachealis muscle were used to investigate the effect of the calcium channel blocker, nifedipine, on airway smooth muscle constriction. With these tracheal strips, two consecutive cumulative concentration-effect curves to histamine (0.1–100 μm) obtained at a 60 min interval were highly reproducible. 2 We examined the effects of adding nifedipine (2.9 μm) to the incubation medium before the second histamine response. The concentration-effect relationships determined after nifedipine incubation were significantly different from control: the response to 100 μm histamine was reduced by approximately one-half (to 2.53 ± 0.6 g; P < 0.025), and the concentration of histamine causing 40% of the maximal control contraction (EC40) increased nearly ten fold (to 36.9 ± 10.5 μm; P < 0.02). 3 In two additional tracheal strips submaximally constricted with 10 μm histamine, nifedipine 2.9 μm caused complete relaxation to resting tension or below. 4 These results indicate a direct inhibitory effect of nifedipine on airway smooth muscle constriction and partial dependence of human trachealis muscle on calcium ion fluxes for initiation and maintenance of contraction. In addition, the results suggest a potential mechanism for the inhibitory effects of calcium channel blocking drugs in exercise-induced asthma.