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Sympathetic activity and presynaptic adrenoceptor function in patients with longstanding essential hypertension.
J Hypertens. 1994 Feb; 12(2):179-90.JH

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To assess the contribution of the sympathetic nervous system to the hypertension in patients with longstanding essential hypertension.

DESIGN

Overall sympathetic function, presynaptic adrenoceptors and neuronal re-uptake were examined after withdrawal of medication for at least 3 weeks in eight patients with longstanding essential hypertension and in eight carefully matched normotensive control subjects.

METHODS

Minimal forearm vascular resistance after 10 min ischaemia was used as a measure of structural vascular changes. Overall sympathetic tone was assessed using tilt testing and pressor dose infusion of noradrenaline. The presence and function of presynaptic adrenoceptors and the neuronal re-uptake of noradrenaline were evaluated in the forearm using tracer noradrenaline kinetics with measurement of forearm noradrenaline plasma appearance rate and noradrenaline plasma spillover. Intra-arterial infusions of tritiated noradrenaline, the endogenous alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor agonist adrenaline, the alpha-adrenoceptor blocker phentolamine, the non-adrenergic vasodilator sodium nitroprusside and the neuronal re-uptake inhibitor desipramine were given in the forearm.

RESULTS

We found that the hypertensives had higher minimal forearm vascular resistance, indicating structural vascular changes; decreased overall sympathetic activity, indicated by a lower basal whole-body noradrenaline production rate; enhanced vasopressor sensitivity for exogenously administered noradrenaline with decreased arterial baroreflex sensitivity; indications of decreased forearm neuronal re-uptake; evidence consistent with the presence of presynaptic, release-facilitating beta-adrenoceptors in the forearm, apparently not functionally different between the two groups; and undecisive evidence for the presence of functional presynaptic alpha-adrenoceptors in the forearm.

CONCLUSIONS

In patients with longstanding essential hypertension we found decreased overall sympathetic activity, with indications of decreased forearm neuronal re-uptake, which might have a compensatory role. We found indications of structural vascular changes and diminished baroreflex sensitivity in the hypertensives, which contribute to the hypertension. However, peripheral presynaptic, release-facilitating beta-adrenoceptors seem to be present, which are functionally not clearly different between the two groups. Observations on peripheral presynaptic alpha-adrenoceptors were inconclusive.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Nephrology, University Hospital Leiden, The Netherlands.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

8021470

Citation

Chang, P C., et al. "Sympathetic Activity and Presynaptic Adrenoceptor Function in Patients With Longstanding Essential Hypertension." Journal of Hypertension, vol. 12, no. 2, 1994, pp. 179-90.
Chang PC, Kriek E, van Brummelen P. Sympathetic activity and presynaptic adrenoceptor function in patients with longstanding essential hypertension. J Hypertens. 1994;12(2):179-90.
Chang, P. C., Kriek, E., & van Brummelen, P. (1994). Sympathetic activity and presynaptic adrenoceptor function in patients with longstanding essential hypertension. Journal of Hypertension, 12(2), 179-90.
Chang PC, Kriek E, van Brummelen P. Sympathetic Activity and Presynaptic Adrenoceptor Function in Patients With Longstanding Essential Hypertension. J Hypertens. 1994;12(2):179-90. PubMed PMID: 8021470.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Sympathetic activity and presynaptic adrenoceptor function in patients with longstanding essential hypertension. AU - Chang,P C, AU - Kriek,E, AU - van Brummelen,P, PY - 1994/2/1/pubmed PY - 1994/2/1/medline PY - 1994/2/1/entrez SP - 179 EP - 90 JF - Journal of hypertension JO - J Hypertens VL - 12 IS - 2 N2 - OBJECTIVE: To assess the contribution of the sympathetic nervous system to the hypertension in patients with longstanding essential hypertension. DESIGN: Overall sympathetic function, presynaptic adrenoceptors and neuronal re-uptake were examined after withdrawal of medication for at least 3 weeks in eight patients with longstanding essential hypertension and in eight carefully matched normotensive control subjects. METHODS: Minimal forearm vascular resistance after 10 min ischaemia was used as a measure of structural vascular changes. Overall sympathetic tone was assessed using tilt testing and pressor dose infusion of noradrenaline. The presence and function of presynaptic adrenoceptors and the neuronal re-uptake of noradrenaline were evaluated in the forearm using tracer noradrenaline kinetics with measurement of forearm noradrenaline plasma appearance rate and noradrenaline plasma spillover. Intra-arterial infusions of tritiated noradrenaline, the endogenous alpha- and beta-adrenoceptor agonist adrenaline, the alpha-adrenoceptor blocker phentolamine, the non-adrenergic vasodilator sodium nitroprusside and the neuronal re-uptake inhibitor desipramine were given in the forearm. RESULTS: We found that the hypertensives had higher minimal forearm vascular resistance, indicating structural vascular changes; decreased overall sympathetic activity, indicated by a lower basal whole-body noradrenaline production rate; enhanced vasopressor sensitivity for exogenously administered noradrenaline with decreased arterial baroreflex sensitivity; indications of decreased forearm neuronal re-uptake; evidence consistent with the presence of presynaptic, release-facilitating beta-adrenoceptors in the forearm, apparently not functionally different between the two groups; and undecisive evidence for the presence of functional presynaptic alpha-adrenoceptors in the forearm. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with longstanding essential hypertension we found decreased overall sympathetic activity, with indications of decreased forearm neuronal re-uptake, which might have a compensatory role. We found indications of structural vascular changes and diminished baroreflex sensitivity in the hypertensives, which contribute to the hypertension. However, peripheral presynaptic, release-facilitating beta-adrenoceptors seem to be present, which are functionally not clearly different between the two groups. Observations on peripheral presynaptic alpha-adrenoceptors were inconclusive. SN - 0263-6352 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/8021470/Sympathetic_activity_and_presynaptic_adrenoceptor_function_in_patients_with_longstanding_essential_hypertension_ L2 - http://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS&PAGE=linkout&SEARCH=8021470.ui DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -