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Hypertension, Vol 18, 79-84, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
N Wasserstrum
In severe preeclampsia, short-term peripartum management of hypertension
with hydralazine is complicated by relatively prolonged hypotensive
episodes, resulting in fetal distress. We hypothesized that nitroprusside's
rapid onset and brief antihypertensive action would permit more controlled
blood pressure reduction. Nitroprusside was infused into 10 invasively
monitored subjects until mean arterial pressure either 1) was gradually
reduced 10-20% or 2) fell abruptly. Subjects fell into two groups, defined
by whether the hypotensive effect of nitroprusside was accompanied by a
fall in heart rate (group A, n = 8) or a rise (group B, n = 2). Group B
showed the expected sinoaortic baroreceptor reflex elevations in heart rate
(+17 +/- 6 beats/min) in response to moderate falls in mean arterial
pressure (-32 +/- 9 mm Hg) elicited by moderate doses (1.03 +/- 0.23
micrograms/kg/min). However in group A, steep reductions in mean arterial
pressure (-75 +/- 22 mm Hg, p less than 0.0001), significantly greater than
in group B (p less than 0.05), occurred at much lower doses (0.35 +/- 0.23
micrograms/kg/min; p less than 0.05) and were accompanied by falls in heart
rate (-21 +/- 7 beats/min). The apparently paradoxical falls in heart rate
and extreme hypotensive responses in group A indicate severe circulatory
compromise, corresponding to the cardiac and vasomotor depression that
characterizes severe hemorrhage and other forms of acute/severe hypovolemic
hypotension. This hemodynamic pattern represents a cardiopulmonary
baroreceptor reflex presumably related to the Bezold- Jarisch reflex. The
appearance of this pattern in the present study probably reflects the
imposition of nitroprusside's prominent venous dilator action on the
relatively reduced blood volume that generally characterizes severe
preeclampsia.
ARTICLES
Nitroprusside in preeclampsia. Circulatory distress and paradoxical bradycardia
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tex 77030.
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