PMID: 6990875Jan 1, 1980Paper

Inhaled powder compared with aerosol administration of fenoterol in asthmatic children

Archives of Disease in Childhood
S ChambersB Taylor

Abstract

Fenoterol as a powdered inhalation was shown to have a longer and stronger bronchodilator effect than the same dose inhaled from a standard metered dose aerosol in a double-blind double-placebo controlled cross-over study in 13 severely asthmatic children. The powder method of administration is free from many of the disadvantages of pressurised aerosols and may prove the method of choice in childhood.

References

Jan 14, 1978·Lancet
Nov 1, 1977·Clinical Allergy·M R Hetzel, T J Clark
Jul 1, 1975·British Journal of Diseases of the Chest·J J CogswellB Taylor
Jan 10, 1976·British Medical Journal·I C Paterson, G K Crompton

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Apr 1, 1985·The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology·H A OrgelJ P Kemp
Jun 1, 1983·Australian Paediatric Journal·K P DawsonJ Allan
Jan 10, 1981·British Medical Journal·K GrimwoodB Taylor
Apr 1, 1981·British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology·R A RobsonB Taylor
May 1, 1985·Australian Paediatric Journal·M I Asher, C Dunn
Nov 22, 2005·Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery·William E Berger

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Asthma

This feed focuses in Asthma in which your airways narrow and swell. This can make breathing difficult and trigger coughing, wheezing and shortness of breath.

Allergy and Asthma

Allergy and asthma are inflammatory disorders that are triggered by the activation of an allergen-specific regulatory t cell. These t cells become activated when allergens are recognized by allergen-presenting cells. Here is the latest research on allergy and asthma.