Open AccessJournal Article
Regulation of sympathetic nerve activity in mild human hypertension
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TL;DR: There is increasing evidence that two humoral agents, epinephrine and insulin, exert excitatory effects on sympathetic neural outflow, which may contribute to the increased sympathetic activity and arterial pressure in human hypertension.
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Abstract: There is substantial evidence for increased sympathetic nerve activity in young, mildly hypertensive humans. This evidence has been derived mainly from measurements of plasma catecholamines and from responses to adrenergic antagonists and agonists in normotensive and mildly hypertensive subjects. In addition, in recent studies direct measurements of sympathetic nerve activity to the muscle circulation have been obtained by microneurography. These data also indicate that sympathetic nerve activity is increased in young, mildly hypertensive humans. The present paper reviews this work with microneurographic measurements and highlights several concepts. (1) The increases in sympathetic nerve activity to the muscle in mild hypertension are not a result of impairment in the inhibitory influence of arterial baroreceptors; presumably, they reflect a heightened central nervous system sympathetic drive. (2) In the supine position the inhibitory influence of cardiopulmonary baroreceptors on sympathetic nerve activity is increased in mild hypertension. This increase in cardiopulmonary baroreflex control buffers the heightened sympathetic neural drive in mildly hypertensive subjects in the supine position, but withdrawal of this increase during orthostatic stress produces exaggerated reflex sympathetic vasoconstrictor responses to orthostasis in mildly hypertensive subjects. (3) Arterial chemoreceptor reflexes are increased in mildly hypertensive subjects and lead to exaggerated increases in sympathetic nerve activity during hypoxia. (4) There is increasing evidence that two humoral agents, epinephrine and insulin, exert excitatory effects on sympathetic neural outflow, which may contribute to the increased sympathetic activity and arterial pressure in human hypertension.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Citations
Sympathetic Nervous System Overactivity and Its Role in the Development of Cardiovascular Disease
TL;DR: This review examines how the sympathetic nervous system plays a major role in the regulation of cardiovascular function over multiple time scales through differential regulation of sympathetic outflow to a variety of organs.
684
Relationship between central sympathetic activity and stages of human hypertension
TL;DR: Central sympathetic activity was greatest in BHT, early stage, and complicated EHT, and as such is likely to play an integral role in the development of hypertension and its complications.
227
The rhythmicity of sympathetic nerve activity
TL;DR: This review focuses on that most engaging feature of the sympathetic nervous system, its rhythmicity, examining the nature of sympathetic nerve activity (SNA), its characteristics, the frequencies of these rhythms and possible mechanisms responsible for their generation.
197
Obesity, the sympathetic nervous system, and essential hypertension.
TL;DR: There is ample evidence that the sympathetic nervous system is important in the etiology of essential hypertension, and the remarkable fall in blood pressure with weight loss in obese subjects is correlated with reductions in plasma norepinephrine.
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Single-unit sympathetic discharge : Quantitative assessment in human hypertensive disease
John P Greenwood,John B. Stoker,David A.S.G. Mary +2 more
- 01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: Quantification from single vasoconstrictor units has provided additional evidence in established essential hypertension of increased central sympathetic output and in the mild or early stages of hypertension, this technique has provided new evidence of augmented sympathetic output compared with more severe hypertension.
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