(Hypertension. 1999;34:724-728.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions |
From Cattedra di Clinica Medica (G.M., G.G., C.G.), Università di Milano, Ospedale S. Gerardo, Monza, Istituto Auxologico Italiano (G.M., G.S.), and Centro di Fisiologia Clinica e Ipertensione (G.M., G.G.), IRCCS, Milano, Italy.
Correspondence to Prof Giuseppe Mancia, Clinica Medica, Ospedale S. Gerardo dei Tintori, Via Donizetti 106, Monza (Milan), Italy.
| Abstract |
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Key Words: nervous system, sympathetic hypertension, essential hypertension, secondary pressoreceptors hypertrophy norepinephrine
| Introduction |
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| Evidence for Sympathetic Activation |
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Further important information has then come from techniques that assay in a sensitive fashion plasma levels of the adrenergic neurotransmitter norepinephrine (NE), because of the demonstration that these levels are low during sleep, increase progressively from the supine to the upright position, and increase from mild to moderate and severe exercise, thereby correlating with behaviorally induced changes in neural sympathetic drive in the cardiovascular system as a whole.6 Although a number of early comparisons between normotensive and hypertensive individuals led to negative results, a meta-analysis of all published data did show that essential-hypertensive patients displayed plasma NE values greater than those of normotensive individuals.7 This finding has since been confirmed in several large-scale studies, including 1 from our group,8 in which essential-hypertensive subjects were found to have an average plasma NE level significantly greater than that in normotensive individuals, although with a large overlap between the 2 groups.
Sophisticated biochemical and neurophysiological approaches, such as the NE radiolabeled technique9 and the microneurographic recording of efferent postganglionic sympathetic nerve traffic from peroneal or brachial nerves,10 have provided the evidence of sympathetic overactivity in human HT that is even more solid. The NE radiolabeled approach is based on intravenous infusion of small amounts of tritiated NE, which allows tissue clearance of this substance to be subtracted from plasma NE values and to make the remainder a marker of the neurotransmitter "spillover" from the neuroeffector junctions. This "spillover" (which, though not identical to it, mirrors in steady-state conditions the secretion of NE from the sympathetic nerve terminals) was shown to be greater in the general circulation of young hypertensive subjects compared with age-matched normotensive individuals.9 It was also shown that in subjects with HT, NE spillover is greater even when separately determined in the brain, heart, and kidney, thereby pointing toward the existence of specific overactivity in the organs of key importance for cardiovascular modulation and performance.9 10 11
The results obtained by employing the microneurographic approach, which allows sympathetic nerve traffic to be recorded only in superficial nerves of the skin and/or muscle district,10 can be summarized as follows. One, in normotensive subjects with a family history of HT, sympathetic nerve traffic may be increased.12 Two, subjects with borderline HT display a number of sympathetic bursts over time (or corrected for heart rate values) that is greater than that found in normotensive controls.3 13 14 Three, sympathetic nerve traffic increases progressively from the normotensive to the moderately and more severe essential-hypertensive state (Figure 1).15 Four, an increased number of sympathetic bursts characterizes isolated systolic HT and pregnancy-induced HT.16 17 The fifth point, confirming previous findings of an increase in urinary or plasma NE values,18 19 is that the same phenomenon can be observed not only in obese hypertensive but also in obese normotensive subjects.20 21 Thus, sympathetic overactivity can be detected in hypertensive patients with different degrees of BP elevation and of different ages. The very initial hypertensive stages are by no means an exception, which suggests that this phenomenon may have a role in both the maintenance and the initiation of this condition.
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Two further issues deserve to be mentioned. First, secondary forms of HT are not necessarily characterized by an increased central sympathetic outflow. In primary aldosteronism,22 adrenal pheochromocytoma, or renovascular HT,15 for example, sympathetic nerve traffic has been found to be similar to that of age-matched normotensive controls. Furthermore, evidence has been provided that this traffic is increased after surgical removal of pheochromocytoma23 or after successful renal angioplasty,24 which may even imply that some secondary forms of HT are accompanied by an active central sympathoinhibition. This does not mean, however, that sympathetic cardiovascular influences are all invariably decreased. In renovascular HT, for example, an active central sympathoinhibition may coexist with a stimulation of NE secretion and an amplification of the adrenergic receptor responsiveness to the elevated levels of angiotensin II,25 making the overall autonomic cardiovascular modulation more rather than less active. Second, the sympathetic overactivity characterizing essential HT may not be generalized to the whole cardiovascular system, as exemplified by the evidence that both in mild and more severe essential-hypertensive patients, the number of sympathetic bursts is increased in fibers innervating skeletal muscle tissue but not in fibers innervating the skin.21 This heterogeneous behavior (which is also typical of obesity and heart failure21 ) may originate from the peculiarity of the mechanisms that govern skin vasomotor tone. This tone has been shown to exquisitely depend on autonomic modulation, in response, however, not from the baroreflex (as is muscle sympathetic tone4 8 ) but from thermoregulatory centers located in the hypothalamus.26 It is possible that this modulation is more effectively preserved in disease because of the vital influence of temperature control for body homeostasis.
| Mechanisms Responsible for Sympathetic Overactivity |
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Two additional possibilities also need to be briefly mentioned. The first 1 maintains that activation of the SNS has a central nature; ie, it depends on an excessive hypothalamic drive due to excessive environmental stimuli and/or an inherent subcortical hyperresponsiveness to an otherwise "normal" environment.1 4 However, in essential-hypertensive subjects, heart rate, BP, and vascular responses to laboratory stressors have more often been shown to be normal than abnormal, both in the established and in the initial or even prehypertensive stage.32 Furthermore, the studies that have tried to determine whether an initial hyperresponsiveness to stress more frequently leads to permanent HT (possibly through a period of an increased BP variability) have been in all instances retrospective and uncontrolled. Finally, it has been more and more widely seen that quantification of tissue responsiveness to stress is encumbered with methodological difficulties because (1) the hemodynamic responses to laboratory stressors have a limited reproducibility,32 (2) an excessive pressor and tachycardic response to a given stress may not reflect an excessive response to all stressful stimuli,33 and (3) cardiovascular reactivity to laboratory stressors bear only a limited relationship with BP variability as measured in daily life conditions.33 Thus, although verified in animal models of HT and appealing to both investigators and patients, the possibility of a central and stress-related origin of essential HT must be regarded as unproven.
The second possibility maintains that the activation of the SNS accompanying HT is due to impairment of a reflex that restrains sympathetic tone to an important degree, ie, the arterial baroreflex.34 This hypothesis has received support from animal and human studies that have shown that when BP is chronically elevated, the baroreceptor ability to modulate vagal tone undergoes early impairment,34 which becomes progressively more evident as HT becomes more severe. However, carotid baroreceptor modulation of BP had in 1978 been shown to be similar in normotensive, mild hypertensive, and more severe essential-hypertensive subjects, who all showed similar depressor and pressor responses to carotid baroreceptor stimulation and deactivation obtained via a neck chamber device, ie, by increasing and reducing baroreceptor activity above and below the existing level of activity by increasing and reducing carotid transmural pressure.35 Furthermore, recent data have clearly documented that when BP is progressively increased or reduced by stepwise intravenous infusions of nitroprusside or phenylephrine, the degree of reflex sympathoexcitation and inhibition is superimposable in normotensive, mild hypertensive, and more severe essential-hypertensive individuals, findings that are at variance with the concomitant reflex changes in heart rate, which have been shown to be markedly reduced in the latter 2 groups.15
This finding should not be interpreted, however, to imply that the adrenergic activation of HT has no relationship with reflex sympathetic modulation whatsoever. Essential HT is characterized by a resetting of the arterial baroreflex modulation of BP and sympathetic nerve traffic toward the elevated BP values (ie, by a displacement to the right from normotension to hypertension of the curve relating BP and sympathetic nerve traffic), a phenomenon that operates to maintain, rather than reduce, the BP increase.15 34 35 In addition, the tonic inhibitory restraint exerted by cardiac volume receptors on sympathetic drive to skeletal muscle vessels, NE and renin release can be impaired in HT.35 This was documented by our group in a study36 in which rapid changes in forearm vascular resistance, plasma NE, and plasma renin activity to cardiac receptor stimulation (induced by an increase in central venous pressure due to passive leg raising) and deactivation (induced by a reduction in central venous pressure due to nonhypotensive lower-body negative pressure) were evaluated in normotensive and essential-hypertensive subjects without and with echocardiographic evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy. As shown in Figure 2, compared with normotensive controls, all responses were slightly reduced in hypertensive subjects without left ventricular hypertrophy but were markedly impaired in patients in whom the high-BP state was accompanied by an increased thickness of cardiac walls. It thus appears that reflex mechanisms may participate in the sympathetic activation of essential HT, although so far as the cardiogenic reflex is concerned, its role may be a later rather than an earlier one, with implications that thus deal more with the maintenance than with the initiation of HT. In this context, it should be mentioned that the cardiogenic reflex participation in the later phases of HT may be nonspecifically related to cardiac hypertrophy rather than to HT "per se," because a similar impairment of reflex responses to cardiac receptor stimulation and deactivation has been observed in normotensive athletes with a marked "physiological" cardiac hypertrophy.37
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| Sympathetic Activation and Organ Damage |
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Two final points deserve to be discussed. One, by promoting vascular smooth muscle cell replication, activation of the SNS can favor the atherogenic process because smooth muscle cell replication precedes their migration to the intima and transformation to macrophages, thereby representing a key element in the cascade of events leading to the established atherosclerotic plaque.45 Two, we have shown in rats that carotid and femoral artery distensibility is increased by sympathectomy.46 We have shown that this is also the case in humans in whom radial artery and femoral artery distensibilities were found to increase markedly after removal of adrenergic tone by anesthesia of the brachial plexus and the spinal cord, respectively.47 This is presumably due to a sympathetically mediated contraction of vascular smooth muscle, because contracted muscle tissue is less prone to distension for intravascular pressure than is muscle tissue in a relaxed state.39 Additionally, it may be due to the viscoelastic properties of the arterial wall that give its distensibility considerable inertia. This effect operates to stiffen the arteries even when heart rate increases, as occurs when the SNS is activated.48
| Conclusions |
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Received June 2, 1999; first decision July 14, 1999; accepted August 2, 1999.
| References |
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H. A. Koomans, P. J. Blankestijn, and J. A. Joles Sympathetic Hyperactivity in Chronic Renal Failure: A Wake-up Call J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., March 1, 2004; 15(3): 524 - 537. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. J. Huggett, E. M. Scott, S. G. Gilbey, J. B. Stoker, A. F. Mackintosh, and D. A.S.G. Mary Impact of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus on Sympathetic Neural Mechanisms in Hypertension Circulation, December 23, 2003; 108(25): 3097 - 3101. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. F. Sved and J. C. Sved Plasticity of GABA function in the nucleus tractus solitarius in hypertension Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, December 1, 2003; 285(6): R1272 - R1273. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. Zoccali, F. Mallamaci, G. Tripepi, F. A. Benedetto, S. Parlongo, S. Cutrupi, D. Iellamo, G. Bonanno, F. Rapisarda, P. Fatuzzo, et al. Prospective Study of Neuropeptide Y as an Adverse Cardiovascular Risk Factor in End-Stage Renal Disease J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., October 1, 2003; 14(10): 2611 - 2617. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. R. Davrath, Y. Goren, I. Pinhas, E. Toledo, and S. Akselrod Early autonomic malfunction in normotensive individuals with a genetic predisposition to essential hypertension Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, October 1, 2003; 285(4): H1697 - H1704. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. Grassi, G. Seravalle, C. Turri, G. Bolla, and G. Mancia Short-Versus Long-Term Effects of Different Dihydropyridines on Sympathetic and Baroreflex Function in Hypertension Hypertension, March 1, 2003; 41(3): 558 - 562. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Y.H. Chan, L.-L. Wang, Y.-M. Chao, and S. H.H. Chan Downregulation of Basal iNOS at the Rostral Ventrolateral Medulla Is Innate in SHR Hypertension, March 1, 2003; 41(3): 563 - 570. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. H.H.T. Klein, G. Ligtenberg, P. L. Oey, H. A. Koomans, and P. J. Blankestijn Enalapril and Losartan Reduce Sympathetic Hyperactivity in Patients with Chronic Renal Failure J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., February 1, 2003; 14(2): 425 - 430. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Corti, C. Binggeli, I. Sudano, L. Spieker, E. Hanseler, F. Ruschitzka, W. F. Chaplin, T. F. Luscher, and G. Noll Coffee Acutely Increases Sympathetic Nerve Activity and Blood Pressure Independently of Caffeine Content: Role of Habitual Versus Nonhabitual Drinking Circulation, December 3, 2002; 106(23): 2935 - 2940. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. Grassi, R. Dell'Oro, G. Seravalle, G. Foglia, F. Q. Trevano, and G. Mancia Short- and Long-Term Neuroadrenergic Effects of Moderate Dietary Sodium Restriction in Essential Hypertension Circulation, October 8, 2002; 106(15): 1957 - 1961. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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P. A. Smith, L. N. Graham, A. F. Mackintosh, J. B. Stoker, and D. A. S. G. Mary Sympathetic neural mechanisms in white-coat hypertension J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., July 3, 2002; 40(1): 126 - 132. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. Zoccali, F. Mallamaci, G. Tripepi, S. Parlongo, S. Cutrupi, F. A. Benedetto, A. Cataliotti, and L. S. Malatino Norepinephrine and Concentric Hypertrophy in Patients With End-Stage Renal Disease Hypertension, July 1, 2002; 40(1): 41 - 46. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. Zoccali, F. Mallamaci, S. Parlongo, S. Cutrupi, F. A. Benedetto, G. Tripepi, G. Bonanno, F. Rapisarda, P. Fatuzzo, G. Seminara, et al. Plasma Norepinephrine Predicts Survival and Incident Cardiovascular Events in Patients With End-Stage Renal Disease Circulation, March 19, 2002; 105(11): 1354 - 1359. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. H. H. T. KLEIN, G. LIGTENBERG, P. L. OEY, H. A. KOOMANS, and P. J. BLANKESTIJN Sympathetic Activity Is Increased in Polycystic Kidney Disease and Is Associated with Hypertension J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., November 1, 2001; 12(11): 2427 - 2433. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. Mancia White coat effect. Innocuous or adverse phenomenon? Eur. Heart J., October 2, 2000; 21(20): 1647 - 1648. [PDF] |
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