Hypertension, Vol 3, 551-556, Copyright © 1981 by American Heart Association
DS Goldstein
Comparative studies of plasma norepinephrine in patients with essential
hypertension and in normotensive controls have consistently reported higher
mean resting levels of norepinephrine in the hypertensive groups, but the
hypertensive-normotensive differences have often been small and, in about
three-fifths of the studies, not statistically significant. The author
reviewed the medical literature to test the hypothesis that, during stress,
hypertensive-normotensive differences in norepinephrine become more
apparent. Among 24 studies involving orthostatic stress, the increment in
norepinephrine with standing was similar for hypertensives and
normotensives (239 vs 230 pg/ml). In contrast, among eight studies
involving exercise, the increment in norepinephrine was significantly
greater in hypertensives (834 vs 450 pg/ml). For both standing and isotonic
exercise, absolute changes in norepinephrine with stress correlated with
basal norepinephrine across the hypertensive but not the normotensive
groups. These results are consistent with the existence within the
hypertensive population of a subgroup of patients with elevated
norepinephrine levels at rest and excessive sympathetic responsiveness to
stress. However, the available literature is decidedly lacking in studies
about other types of stress besides standing and exercise.
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Plasma norepinephrine during stress in essential hypertension
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