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Original Article

Evidences Supporting an Increased Sympathetic Tone and Reactivity in a Subgroup of Patients with Essential Hypertension

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Pages 359-377 | Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Several experimental evidences have shown that, under standardized conditions, circulating catecholamines (CA) or norepinephrine (NE) levels can be used as a valid index of the sympathoadrenal activity in animal and man. This approach in the study of hypertensive patients has permitted to uncover that about 50% of patients with labile hypertension and about 30% of patients with stable hypertension had elevated CA levels at rest for 20 minutes in the supine position. The increased CA levels were mainly due to a rise in NE in stable hypertension and to a rise in epinephrine (E) in labile hypertension. On the basis of circulating CA levels, the hypertensive patients were divided into hyperadrenergic (CA levels above normal range) and normoadrenergic (CA levels within the normal range) subgroups. The hyperadrenergic labile or stable hypertensive subgroups were found to be also characterized by an enhanced CA or NE increase in response to change in position from supine to standing, by a faster heart rate and by an increased myocardial contractility, while these parameters were normal in the normoadrenergic subgroups. These findings support therefore the existence of an increased sympathetic tone and reactivity in association with hyperkinetic cardiac functions in an important population of hypertensive patients. In response to two weeks treatment with beta-blockers (either propranolol or metoprolol) hyperadrenergic stable hypertensive patients were found to be more responsive to this therapy than normoadrenergic patients although both groups had the same initial blood pressure. Moreover, this treatment lowered basal NE or CA levels and restored the enhanced CA or NE response to change in position toward normal in hyperadrenergic patients while it did not modify significantly circulating supine or standing CA and NE in normoadrenergic patients. These findings strongly support a participation of the sympathetic system in the maintenance of an elevated blood pressure in hyperadrenergic patients and raise the possibility of using a more rational approach in the therapy of hypertension.

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