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Plasma Catecholamines and Cardiac, Renal and Peripheral Vascular Adrenoceptor-Mediated Responses in Different Age Groups of Normal and Hypertensive Subjects

65

Citations

34

References

1980

Year

Abstract

The role of the sympathetic nervous system in cardiac, renal and peripheral vascular adrenoceptor-mediated responses was investigated in patients with essential hypertension and age-matched normotensive subjects. Regardless of age plasma adrenaline was significantly higher in hypertensive when compared with normotensive subjects. This suggests a sympatho-adrenal factor in essential hypertension. Plasma noradrenaline tended to increase with age but its similarity between normotensive and hypertensive subjects points to similar postganglionic neural activity and/or similar overflow of noradrenaline into the circulation. On the other hand, beta-adrenoceptor-mediated tachycardia in response to exercise and intravenous isoproterenol as well as the forearm vasodilator response to intraarterial isoproterenol decreased in normal subjects with older age. In hypertensives this age-dependent beta-receptor-related effect tends to be enhanced as judged from the greater reduction of cardiac isoproterenol sensitivity and the blunted renin response to exercise stimulation. The dilator response to alpha-adrenoceptor blockade with phentolamine was not different in both groups. Therefore a qualitative rather than quantitative derangement of sympathetic control of vascular resistance - in which beta-dilator effects are reduced and alpha-constrictor mechanisms prevail - may contribute to the maintenance of established hypertension.

References

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