Hypertension, Vol 2, 623-630, Copyright © 1980 by American Heart Association
C Beretta-Piccoli, P Weidmann, A Meier, M Grimm, G Keusch and Z Gluck
The acute responsiveness of plasma catecholamine, renin (PRA), and
aldosterone levels to exogenous norepinephrine was studied under placebo
conditions and following renin (PRA), and aldosterone levels to exogenous
norepinephrine was studied under placebo conditions and following
renin-angiotensin activation by diuretic pretreatment in 25 normal subjects
and 34 patients with borderline-to-moderate essential hypertension.
Norepinephrine infusion caused increases in plasma norepinephrine (PNE)
that correlated with the infused norepinephrine dose (p < 0.001); this
relationship was similar in normal and hypertensive subjects and unaltered
by diuretic therapy. Plasma epinephrine and dopamine levels were unchanged
during norepinephrine infusion. Norepinephrine infusion at pressor doses
stimulated PRA (p < 0.01). The PRA responses correlated with the dose of
infused norepinephrine (p < 0.0025), and norepinephrine-stimulated PRA
correlated with basal PRA (p < 0.001). These norepinephrine-PRA
relationships were unaltered by diuretic treatment and similar in normal
and hypertensive subjects. In both groups, norepinephrine also caused a
similar increase in plasma aldosterone (p < 0.05) under placebo
conditions, but not following diuretic therapy. These findings demonstrate
that an acute increase in the blood levels of the adrenergic
neurotransmittor, norepinephrine, causes mild but distinct stimulation of
plasma renin and aldosterone levels. Renin release in response to exogenous
norepinephrine is not enhanced following renin- angiotensin activation by
diuretic pretreatment. The responsiveness of the
renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system to an acute norepinephrine input seems
to be intact in essential hypertension.
ARTICLES
Effects of short-term norepinephrine infusion on plasma catecholamines, renin, and aldosterone in normal and hypertensive man
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