Chronic hyperinsulinemia and blood pressure. Interaction with catecholamines?

Abstract
Although hyperinsulinemia and increased adrenergic activity have been postulated to be important factors in obesity-associated hypertension, a cause and effect relation between insulin, catecholamines, and hypertension has not been established. The aim of this study was to determine whether chronic hyperinsulinemia, comparable with that found in obese hypertensive patients, causes hypertension in normal dogs, increases plasma catecholamines, or potentiates the blood pressure effects of norepinephrine. In six normal dogs, insulin infusion (1.0 milliunits/kg/min) for 7 days, with euglycemia maintained, increased fasting insulin fourfold to sixfold. However, mean arterial pressure did not increase, averaging 99 +/- 2 mm Hg during the control period and 91 +/- 3 mm Hg during the 7 days of insulin infusion. Insulin did not alter plasma norepinephrine or epinephrine, which averaged 171 +/- 27 and 71 +/- 14 pg/ml, respectively, during the control period and 188 +/- 29 and 45 +/- 12 pg/ml during the 7 days of ins...