首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Increased Vasoconstrictor Sensitivity to Glucocorticoids in Essential Hypertension
Increased Vasoconstrictor Sensitivity to Glucocorticoids in Essential Hypertension

 

作者: Brian R. Walker,   Ruth Best,   Cedric H.L. Shackleton,   L. Paul Padfield,   Christopher R.W. Edwards,  

 

期刊: Hypertension  (OVID Available online 1996)
卷期: Volume 27, issue 2  

页码: 190-196

 

ISSN:0194-911X

 

年代: 1996

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Glucocorticoids raise blood pressure but were thought not to play a pathophysiological role in essential hypertension when it was demonstrated that cortisol secretion rates and circulating concentrations are normal in this disease. However, recent observations suggest that increased tissue sensitivity to cortisol, mediated by either abnormal glucocorticoid receptors or impaired inactivation of cortisol by 11 beta-dehydrogenase, may allow cortisol to raise blood pressure despite normal circulating concentrations. We studied 11 patients with essential hypertension and 11 matched normotensive control subjects. Dermal vasoconstriction after topical application of both cortisol (16 plus and minus 4 versus 32 plus/minus 5 U, control subjects versus hypertensive patients; P < .02) and beclomethasone dipropionate (75 plus/minus 10 versus 100 plus/minus 7 U; P < .05) was increased in the hypertensive patients. Hypothalamic-pituitary glucocorticoid receptor sensitivity was normal, as judged by basal cortisol secretion rates and suppression of plasma cortisol during sequential overnight dexamethasone suppression tests. 11 beta-Dehydrogenase activity was impaired in essential hypertension, as judged by prolonged half-lives of [11 alpha-3Hydrogen]cortisol (44 plus/minus 4 versus 58 plus/minus 4 minutes, control subjects versus hypertensive patients; P < .02). However, this did not correlate with the dermal vasoconstrictor response. We conclude that vasoconstrictor sensitivity to glucocorticoids is increased in essential hypertension and that this may initiate and/or sustain the increased peripheral vascular resistance that characterizes this disease. The mechanism of increased sensitivity remains uncertain, but it will be important to establish whether it relates to genetic abnormalities of the glucocorticoid receptor that have been observed in animal models and young individuals who are predisposed to essential hypertension. (Hypertension. 1996;27:190-196.)

 



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