Publication | Open Access
Norepinephrine spillover to plasma in patients with congestive heart failure: evidence of increased overall and cardiorenal sympathetic nervous activity.
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References
1986
Year
HypertensionHeart FailureAdrenal GlandPlasma KineticsCardiovascular DiseaseCardiogenic ShockAutonomic SystemSympathetic Nervous SystemPhysiologyCardiovascular PharmacologyCongestive Heart FailureDiuretic ResistanceNorepinephrine SpilloverAnesthesiaMedicineCardiologyEndocrine Hypertension
The plasma kinetics of norepinephrine provide a quantitative estimate of whole‑body and organ‑specific sympathetic nervous activity. Patients with congestive heart failure show markedly elevated plasma norepinephrine and total sympathetic activity, with 540 % cardiac and 206 % renal spillover, normal pulmonary spillover, and increased adrenomedullary output, highlighting regional sympathetic dysregulation and its therapeutic implications.
The analysis of plasma kinetics of the sympathetic neurotransmitter norepinephrine can be used to estimate sympathetic nervous "activity" (integrated nerve firing rate) for the body as a whole and for individual organs. In 12 patients with cardiac failure (left ventricular ejection fraction 10% to 39%), the mean arterial plasma norepinephrine concentration was 557 +/- 68 pg/ml (mean +/- SE) compared with 211 +/- 21 pg/ml in 15 subjects without heart failure (p less than .002). The difference was due to both increased release of norepinephrine to plasma (indicating increased "total" sympathetic activity) and reduced clearance of norepinephrine from plasma. The increase in sympathetic activity did not involve all organs equally. Cardiac (32 +/- 9 vs 5 +/- 1 ng/min; p less than .002) and renal (202 +/- 45 vs 66 +/- 9 ng/min; p = .002) norepinephrine spillover were increased by 540% and 206%, respectively, but norepinephrine spillover from the lungs was normal. Adrenomedullary activity was also increased in the patients with heart failure, whose mean arterial plasma epinephrine concentration was 181 +/- 38 pg/ml compared with 71 +/- 12 pg/ml in control subjects (p less than .02). There is marked regional variation, inapparent from measurements of plasma norepinephrine concentration, in sympathetic nerve activity in patients with congestive heart failure. The finding of increased cardiorenal norepinephrine spillover has important pathophysiologic and therapeutic implications.
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