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(Hypertension. 1999;33:548-553.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions |
From the Division of Pediatric Cardiology (A.P.R.), University of Michigan (Ann Arbor); Division of Pediatric Cardiology (P.M.), Department of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota (Minneapolis); and Division of Pediatric Cardiology (H.Z.M., A.J.R., K.B.), Children's Memorial Hospital and Northwestern University, Chicago, Ill.
Correspondence to Albert P. Rocchini, MD, Pediatric Cardiology, C.S. Mott Hospital, University of Michigan Medical Center, F1310 MCHC, Box 0204, 1500 East Medical Center Dr, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0204. E-mail rocchini{at}umich.edu
| Abstract |
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Key Words: hypertension, arterial obesity insulin resistance clonidine sympathetic nervous system cardiac output
| Introduction |
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We believe that an alternate hypothesis to explain the
pathogenesis of obesity-induced hypertension is that chronic central
sympathetic nervous system activation links insulin resistance and
hypertension. Sowers et al6 observed that borderline
hypertensive obese subjects had higher norepinephrine
levels than did nonobese normotensive control subjects, that their
blood pressure correlated with norepinephrine levels, and
that weight loss was accompanied by a fall in blood pressure that
correlated with a decrease in serum norepinephrine. Hall et
al7 suggested that combined
- and ß-adrenergic
blockade reduced arterial pressure to a much greater extent
in obese than in normal dogs. Fasting or caloric
deprivation reduces sympathetic activity and overfeeding
stimulates sympathetic activity.8
Diebert and DeFronzo9 demonstrated that impairs both peripheral and hepatic resistance to the action of insulin. Jamerson et al10 demonstrated that a reflex increase in sympathetic tone in normotensive individuals can lead to acute insulin resistance in the forearm.
Thus, it is possible that central activation of the sympathetic nervous system is the physiological link that connects excess dietary intake to insulin resistance and hypertension. Through the feeding of fat with or without clonidine to dogs, the present study was designed to evaluate the role that the central sympathetic system plays in the development of hypertension and insulin resistance.
| Methods |
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Laboratory Measurements
Arterial pressure was measured with a pressure
transducer mounted at the level of the heart, and the analog signals
were sent to a computer to be analyzed. The computer calculated
the average systolic, diastolic, and mean blood
pressures and heart rate (over a 15- to 30-minute period). Cardiac
output was measured with Cardiogreen dye (Waters Instruments).
Insulin resistance was assessed with a multiple insulin dose euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp. The multiple insulin infusion euglycemic clamps were performed twice before starting the high fat diet and at 1, 3, and 6 weeks of the high fat diet. Arterial samples were obtained to determine basal glucose, insulin, and potassium levels, and cardiac output was measured. A constant infusion of insulin was administered at 3 insulin infusion rates (1, 2, and 30 mU · kg-1 · min-1).1 Concomitant with the insulin, an intravenous infusion of 20% glucose was administered with a variable infusion syringe pump to maintain euglycemia. To prevent severe hypokalemia, K2HPO4 was infused. Blood pressure and heart rate were continuously monitored throughout the clamp procedure. During the last 30 minutes of the insulin infusion, arterial blood was sampled for glucose, insulin, and potassium levels, and cardiac output was measured as the average of 2 determinations.
In 4 no-clonidine fatfed dogs and 4 clonidine plus fatfed dogs, basal glucose turnover was measured (at weeks 0, 1, 3, and 6) using D-[3-3H]glucose.11 The rate of hepatic glucose production was calculated, assuming steady-state conditions, using the Steele equation. These values of basal glucose production were used in the calculation of the insulin dose-response curves.
Analytic Methods
The serum glucose concentration was measured in duplicate with
the glucose oxidase method using a glucose analyzer (model A23;
Yellow Springs Instruments). Serum insulin was measured with
double-antibody radioimmunoassay (ICN Biomedical). Plasma electrolytes
were measured with flame photometry. Blood for the determination of
plasma glucose specific activity was collected in sodium
fluoridetreated tubes and immediately spun, and the
supernatant was removed and stored at -20°C.1
Statistical Analysis
All values are mean±SEM. Weekly blood pressures, heart rates,
and body weights were determined by averaging the daily values, and
cardiac output and plasma glucose and insulin levels were determined by
averaging the 2 values obtained each week. The dose-response curves for
whole body glucose uptake versus insulin were fitted to a
4-parameter logistic equation using a least-squares mean
iterative routine (ALLFIT)12 as follows:
Y={(A-D)/[1+(I/ED50)B]}+D,
where A is the expected maximal response, D is the expected minimal
response, I is the insulin concentration, ED50 is
the insulin concentration with expected response halfway between A and
D, and B is the slope factor. After obtaining parameters A,
D, B, and ED50 for the fat and no clonidine and
the fat plus clonidine groups, separate analyses were performed
to test whether parameters were similar between the groups.
A repeated measures analysis was used to determine whether a
significant change in the parameters occurred over
time.
Within each group, a repeated measures ANOVA was performed for each variable to determine whether a significant change in the variable occurred over time. A 2-factor ANOVA for repeated measures was then performed for each variable to assess differences between the dogs fed the high fat diet and no clonidine and the dogs fed clonidine plus the high fat diet.
| Results |
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Euglycemic Clamp Data
During the euglycemic clamp studies, the steady-state
blood glucose concentration in all dogs averaged ~5.2 mmol/L and
did not differ from the fasting concentration at any insulin infusion
rate. The coefficient of variation of glucose level at each insulin
plateau was<5%.
To characterize the ability of clonidine treatment to alter the
insulin-mediated glucose uptake relation that occurs in dogs fed a high
fat diet, we measured insulin-mediated glucose uptake dose-response
curves before and after the high fat diet. Basal rates of whole body
glucose uptake (hepatic glucose production) were measured on 4
dogs in the clonidine group and 4 dogs in the no-clonidine group. The
high fat diet did not significantly change basal rates of whole body
glucose uptake in either group of dogs (24±6 µmol · kg
-1 · min-1 at week 0 versus 22±8
µmol · kg-1 · min-1 at week 6 in
the no-clonidine group and 26±8 µmol · kg-1
· min-1 at week 0 versus 25±9 µmol ·
kg-1 · min-1 at week 6 in the clonidine
group). Throughout the study, the 1mU · kg-1 ·
min-1 insulin dose completely suppressed hepatic glucose
output in both groups of dogs. During increasing insulin dose rates,
whole body glucose uptake increased in a sigmoidal fashion (Figure 2
). In the no-clonidine group, the high
fat diet was associated with a shift in the glucose uptake curve to the
right, and the rate of maximal whole body glucose uptake was
significantly decreased (P<0.001) (Table 2
). Compared with the control, prehigh
fat period, the insulin concentration expected to produce a
half-maximal response in glucose uptake (insulin
ED50 dose) was 50% (P<0.01) higher
at 1 week and 85% (P<0.001) higher at 6 weeks of the fat
diet. In contrast to the no-clonidine group, the clonidine-treated
group did not experience any change in the glucose uptake curve during
the 6 weeks of the high fat diet. After 6 weeks of the high fat diet,
the clonidine group had both maximal glucose uptake and the insulin
concentration expected to produce a half-maximal response in glucose
uptake (insulin ED50 dose), which were
unchanged from values obtained in this control period. (Table 2
)
In addition, 1 week of clonidine treatment without the high fat diet
(week -1 versus week 0) also did not change the insulin-mediated
glucose uptake curve. Finally, despite the infusion of the same amount
of insulin per kilogram of weight in both groups of dogs, only the
group of dogs that did not receive clonidine experienced, when fed the
high fat diet, an increase over time in the plateau insulin values
during the multiple-dose clamps (Table 2
).
|
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In the no-clonidine group, the high fat diet was associated with an
increase in resting cardiac output (P<0.01), whereas in the
clonidine-treated group, the high fat diet resulted in no significant
increase in cardiac output (P>0.1) (Table 1
). In
both groups of dogs, before starting the high fat diet,
euglycemic hyperinsulinemia caused a
dose-dependent increase in cardiac output (Figure 3
). In the no-clonidine group, feeding
the high fat diet resulted in rightward shift of the effect of insulin
to increase cardiac output and a reduced maximal insulin-stimulated
cardiac output (P<0.05) (Table 2
). After 6 weeks of
the fat diet, euglycemic
hyperinsulinemia caused virtually no increase in
cardiac output. However, in the clonidine group, the high fat diet did
not change the ability of insulin to increase cardiac output. After 6
weeks of the high fat diet, euglycemic
hyperinsulinemia in clonidine-treated dogs still
resulted in a 37% increase in cardiac output.
|
In both groups of dogs, before starting the high fat diet, the euglycemic clamp resulted in a 6±2 mm Hg decrease in arterial pressure and a 7±3 bpm increase in rate. In the no-clonidine group, after 6 weeks of a high fat diet, euglycemic hyperinsulinemia did not cause either a decrease in arterial pressure or an increase in heart rate; however, in the clonidine group, the high fat diet euglycemic hyperinsulinemia was still associated with a 5±2 mm Hg decrease in pressure and a 5±3 increase in heart rate.
| Discussion |
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2-receptors and, to a lesser
degree, the I1 imidazole receptors, prevented
both the hypertension and insulin resistance associated with weight
gain in the dog. Our finding that clonidine prevented hypertension in
the obese dog model is consist with the report of Hall et
al7 They demonstrated that combined
- and
ß-adrenergic blockade reduced arterial pressure to a much
greater extent in obese than in normal dogs. We believe the mechanism
whereby clonidine treatment prevented the increase in blood pressure
associated with weight gain is due to central inhibition of the
peripheral sympathic nervous system.13 Because
we did not directly measure sympathetic activity, further studies are
necessary to directly prove that clonidine inhibited
peripheral sympathetic activity. The failure of weight gain
to induce tachycardia in the clonidine-treated dogs is
consistent with the known central nervous system action of
clonidine. In addition, the failure of clonidine-treated dogs to
increase their cardiac output in association with weight gain is
consistent with a reduced degree of renal salt and water
retention. Kassab et al14 have shown that bilateral renal
denervation prevents the hypertension and sodium retention associated
with obesity in the dog. We believe that clonidine treatment could have
prevented the high fat dietinduced activation of the renal efferent
sympathetic nerves. Further studies that measure in detail the sodium
and fluid balance in clonidine-treated dogs fed a high fat diet will be
necessary to more directly answer whether clonidine does prevent sodium
and fluid retention in obese dogs.
Perhaps the more important and new finding in the present study is
that clonidine also prevented the insulin resistance associated with
obesity in the dog. Using the multiple insulin dose
euglycemic clamp, we demonstrated that clonidine prevents
the reduced sensitivity and responsiveness of the insulin-mediated
glucose uptake dose-response curve that is associated with weight gain
(Figure 2
, Table 2
). It has been speculated that insulin
resistance (ie, resistance to the ability of insulin to stimulate
glucose uptake) is the common metabolic abnormality
connecting obesity, hypertension, and increased sympathetic nervous
system activity. This hypothesis is supported by numerous reports that
document a relation between insulin resistance and
hypertension.1 2 3 However, the present study supports
the concept, originally proposed by Julius et al,15 that
central nervous systeminduced sympathetic activation, not insulin
resistance or hyperinsulinemia, is the
metabolic link that connects obesity to hypertension.
Our finding that clonidine treatment prevented the insulin resistance
associated with weight gain in the dog is consistent with other
reports. Giugliano et al16 reported that in 20
hypertensive patients with noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus,
clonidine treatment was associated with an improvement in insulin
sensitivity in peripheral tissues. Using the glucose clamp,
these investigators found that clonidine significantly improved overall
glucose metabolism and that this improvement was
accompanied by increases in both oxidative and nonoxidative glucose
metabolism. Other central acting antihypertensive drugs
also have been reported to improve insulin resistance. Moxonidine, a
highly selective I1 imidazole receptor agonist
with weak central
2-receptor effects, has been
shown to prevent the insulin resistance,
hyperinsulinemia, and hypertension in rats fed a
fructose-enriched diet17 and to reduce blood pressure,
reduce triglycerides, and improve glucose tolerance in
obese spontaneously hypertensive rats.18 However, in their
fructose-fed rate model, Hwang et al19 failed to show a
beneficial effect of clonidine in preventing insulin resistance despite
demonstrating that clonidine did prevent the increase in blood
pressure. The acute administration of clonidine has been shown to
induce hyperglycemia and impaired glucose tolerance in rats and
humans.20 However, chronic clonidine treatment does not
appear to exert such effects.21
The present study was not designed to determine the mechanism
whereby clonidine prevents the development of insulin resistance that
occurs in dogs fed a high fat diet. However, because of previous
studies and our present study design, some inferences can be made
into the mechanism of insulin resistance. Insulin-mediated glucose
uptake is determined both by the ability of insulin to stimulate
glucose extraction at the level of tissues and cells and by the rate of
glucose and insulin delivery (blood flow). Thus, the relative
contributions of tissue and blood flow actions of insulin will
determine the overall rate of glucose uptake (ie, degree of insulin
resistance). Baron et al22 observed that the reduced rate
of insulin-mediated glucose uptake that occurs in
noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, obesity, and hypertension may
be due in large part to an impairment in the action of insulin to
increase skeletal muscle blood flow. In the present and other
studies,1 we have demonstrated that obese dogs have a
reduced ability of euglycemic
hyperinsulinemia to increase cardiac output (Figure 3
). Because clonidine treatment enabled euglycemic
hyperinsulinemia to cause a dose-dependent increase
in cardiac output even after the dogs gained weight, we believe that
the increased blood flow responses to insulin may have contributed to
the improvement in insulin resistance with clonidine. Vollenweider et
al23 demonstrated that insulin resistance in obese
subjects is associated, in skeletal muscle, with a specific impairment
of sympathetic neural and vasodilatory responsiveness to
hyperinsulinemia. The impairment of insulin to
increase skeletal muscle blood flow in obesity and in
noninsulin-dependent diabetes is speculated to be related to an
abnormality in the nitric oxide system.24 Insulin is known
to interact with the sympathetic nervous system at the vascular level,
predominantly through the
2-adrenergic
pathway.25 Lacolley et al26 demonstrated that
the sympathetic nervous system plays an important role in modulating
the synthesis, release, or both of vascular nitric oxide. Thus, it is
possible that clonidine treatment of dogs fed a high fat diet may have
prevented insulin resistance by blocking the sympathetically mediated
reduced vasodilator responsiveness to insulin known to occur in
obesity.
Besides the affect of the sympathetic nervous system on glucose uptake by reducing blood flow, there is evidence that the sympathetic nervous system can directly influence the cellular uptake of glucose. Takahashi et al27 demonstrated in the rat that ventromedial hypothalamic stimulation can alter peripheral glucose uptake at the cellular level. Catecholamine treatment of rat adipocytes has also been demonstrated to reduce the tyrosine kinase activity of the insulin receptor.28 Finally, because clonidine is known to suppress free fatty acid levels,29 it is possible that glucose uptake in our obese dogs was improved by increasing oxidative glucose metabolism.
In summary, the results of the present study document that clonidine treatment of dogs fed a high fat diet blocks the development of both hypertension and insulin resistance even though the dogs still gained weight. Further studies will be necessary to better clarify how clonidine is able to dissociate weight gain from both hypertension and insulin resistance.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
Received September 16, 1998; first decision October 14, 1998; accepted October 26, 1998.
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