Hypertension, Vol 5, 873-880, Copyright © 1983 by American Heart Association
P Weidmann, C Beretta-Piccoli, L Link, MG Bianchetti, K Boehringer and JJ Morton
The influence of agents that inhibit sympathetic nerve activity on
cardiovascular responsiveness as related to major pressor factors has been
unclear. Therefore, these components were evaluated in 11 normal subjects
and 13 patients with mild essential hypertension before and after 4 weeks
of sympathetic neuron blockade with the agent debrisoquine. In these normal
and mildly hypertensive subjects, sympathetic neuron blockade caused
approximately similar decreases in urinary and supine or upright plasma
norepinephrine (NE) levels (average changes in the two groups, -41% and
-45%, respectively; p less than 0.05 to less than 0.005), the chronotropic
dose of isoproterenol (- 45% and -38%), and the NE pressor dose (-47% and
-51%, p less than 0.01), while the relationship between NE-induced changes
in blood pressure and concomitant plasma NE concentrations was displaced to
the left (p less than 0.01). Supine heart rate was also lowered (-10% and -
8%, p less than 0.05). Compared to the orthostatic variations during
placebo conditions, mild postural decreases in blood pressure were apparent
in both the normal and hypertensive groups (-8% and -7.5%). However, supine
blood pressure was unchanged following debrisoquine treatment. Other
parameters were also not consistently changed, such as total blood volume,
exchangeable body sodium, urinary electrolytes, plasma epinephrine, renin,
and angiotensin II (AII) levels, the pressor dose of infused AII, and the
relationship between AII-induced changes in blood pressure and plasma AII
measured before and during AII infusion. These findings demonstrate that
the reduction in sympathetic outflow during sympathetic neuron blockade may
elicit a hyperresponsiveness of alpha- and beta-adrenergic receptors that
is equal in normal subjects and patients with mild essential hypertension.
ARTICLES
Cardiovascular counterregulation during sympathetic inhibition in normal subjects and patients with mild hypertension
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