首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Neural mechanisms in human obesity‐related hypertension
Neural mechanisms in human obesity‐related hypertension

 

作者: Magdalena Rumantir,   Mario Vaz,   Garry Jennings,   Greg Collier,   David Kaye,   Douglas Seals,   Glen Wiesner,   Hans Brunner-La Rocca,   Murray Esler,  

 

期刊: Journal of Hypertension  (OVID Available online 1999)
卷期: Volume 17, issue 8  

页码: 1125-1133

 

ISSN:0263-6352

 

年代: 1999

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: noradrenaline;adrenaline;obesity;sympathetic nervous system;leptin;heart;kidneys

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

ObjectiveTwo hypotheses concerning mechanisms of weight gain and of blood pressure elevation in obesity were tested. The first hypothesis is that in human obesity sympathetic nervous system underactivity is present, as a metabolic basis for the obesity. The second hypothesis, attributable to Landsberg, is that sympathetic nervous activation occurs with chronic overeating, elevating blood pressure. These are not mutually exclusive hypotheses, since obesity is a heterogeneous disorder.Design and methodsWhole body and regional sympathetic nervous system activity, in the kidneys and heart, was measured at rest using noradrenaline isotope dilution methodology in a total of 86 research voluteers in four different subject groups, in lean and in obese people who either did, or did not, have high blood pressure.ResultsIn the lean hypertensive patients, noradrenaline spillover for the whole body, and from the heart and kidneys was substantially higher than in the healthy lean volunteers. In normotensive obesity, the whole body noradrenaline spillover rate was normal, mean renal noradrenaline spillover was elevated (twice normal), and cardiac noradrenaline spillover reduced by approximately 50%. In obesity-related hypertension, there was elevation of renal noradrenaline spillover, comparable to that present in normotensive obese individuals but not accompanied by suppression of cardiac noradrenaline spillover, which was more than double that of normotensive obese individuals (P< 0.05), and 25% higher than in healthy volunteers. There was a parallel elevation of heart rate in hypertensive obese individuals.ConclusionsThe sympathetic underactivity hypothesis of obesity causation now looks untenable, as based on measures of noradrenaline spillover, sympathetic nervous system activity was normal for the whole body and increased for the kidneys; the low sympathetic activity in the heart would have only a trifling impact on total energy balance. The increase in renal sympathetic activity in obesity may possibly be a necessary cause for the development of hypertension in obese individuals, although clearly not a sufficient cause, being present in both normotensive and hypertensive obese individuals. The discriminating feature of obesity-related hypertension was an absence of the suppression of the cardiac sympathetic outflow seen in normotensive obese individuals. Sympathetic nervous changes in obesityrelated hypertension conformed rather closely to those expected from the Landsberg hypothesis.

 

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