Circulation, Vol 80, 883-892, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
B Trimarco, G Lembo, N De Luca, M Volpe, B Ricciardelli, G Condorelli, G Rosiello and M Condorelli
To investigate whether or not hypertension with left ventricular
hypertrophy (LVH) modifies the mechanisms underlying the vascular
adjustments to orthostatic stress, we evaluated the hemodynamic and
hormonal effects of graded lower-body negative pressure (LBNP) (-10 and -40
mm Hg) before and after sympathetic blockade in 10 hypertensive patients
with LVH and in five age- and sex-matched normotensive subjects. In control
conditions, LBNP elicited comparable vasoconstrictor responses in the
forearm in the two groups. In normotensive subjects, graded increases in
plasma norepinephrine and plasma renin activity (PRA) and reductions in
plasma immunoreactive atrial natriuretic factor (irANF) were recorded. In
hypertensive patients, a significant increase in plasma norepinephrine and
plasma renin activity was obtained only with the higher level of LBNP,
whereas irANF plasma levels decreased progressively. In both groups,
sympathetic blockade abolished the increase in plasma renin activity and
did not modify the changes in plasma irANF induced by both levels of LBNP
in control conditions. The vascular response to -10 mm Hg LBNP remained
unchanged after sympathetic blockade in both groups. However, after
sympathetic blockade, the vasoconstrictor response to -40 mm Hg LBNP in
normal subjects was no longer different from that elicited by - 10 mm Hg
LBNP, whereas in hypertensive patients the vasoconstrictor response was
still significantly higher than that induced by -10 mm Hg LBNP. Direct
correlations between the percent changes in forearm vascular resistance and
those in plasma norepinephrine and plasma renin activity were found only in
normal subjects in control conditions but were not observed after
sympathetic blockade. On the contrary, the inverse correlation between
changes in irANF plasma levels and in forearm vascular resistance found in
control conditions in both groups was still observed after sympathetic
blockade. In a separate group of hypertensive patients with left
ventricular hypertrophy, exogenous infusion of ANF induced an increase in
venous irANF plasma levels of the same magnitude of the decrease evoked by
LBNP and significantly reduced forearm vascular resistance. These data show
that in hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy,
sympathetic activation does not contribute to the vascular response to
cardiopulmonary receptor unloading (-10 mm Hg LBNP). They also suggest that
in these patients inhibition of ANF secretion may play a role in the
response to a low level of LBNP so that the peripheral vasoconstriction
induced by cardiopulmonary receptor unloading is comparable to that
observed in normal subjects despite the lack of appropriate sympathetic
reflex vasoconstriction.
ARTICLES
Blunted sympathetic response to cardiopulmonary receptor unloading in hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy. A possible compensatory role of atrial natriuretic factor
Clinica Medica, II. Facolta di Medicina, Universita di Napoli, Italy.
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