Total effective compliance, cardiac output and fluid volumes in essential hypertension.
- 1 May 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 57 (5) , 995-1000
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.57.5.995
Abstract
Total effective compliance, hemodynamic parameters, extracellular fluid volume, cardiopulmonary (CPBV) and total blood (TBV) volumes were determined in 32 men, including 14 normotensive controls and 18 sustained essential hypertensive patients. The effective compliance was calculated from the changes in central venous pressure recorded simultaneously with the changes in blood volume obtained after a rapid Dextran infusion. In normotensive controls, compliance was 2.08 +/- 0.09 ml/mm Hg/kg and was positively correlated with plasma (r = 0.79) and extracellular fluid (r = 0.84) volumes. In hypertensives, compliance was significantly reduced (1.49 +/- 0.06 ml/mm Hg/kg; P is less than 0.001) and was correlated negatively with the CPBV/TBV ratio (r = -0.75) and positively with the plasma volume/interstitial fluid volume ratio (r = 0.84). These results suggest that in normotensives, there is a regulatory mechanism between volume and compliance and that this contributes to maintaining filling pressure and cardiac output within normal ranges. In hypertensives, the reduced compliance could participate in the maintenance of normal values of cardiac output and extracellular fluid volume by influencing the partition of intravascular and extracellular fluid volumes.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hemodynamic lesions in hypertensionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1975
- Mesenteric hemodynamics in early experimental renal hypertension in dogs.Circulation Research, 1975
- Venous smooth muscle in hypertension. Enhanced contractility of portal veins from spontaneously hypertensive rats.Circulation Research, 1975
- Vascular reactivity to norepinephrine and hemodynamic parameters in borderline hypertensionAmerican Heart Journal, 1975
- Effective Compliance of the Total Vascular Bed and the Intrathoracic Compartment Derived from Changes in Central Venous Pressure Induced by Volume Changes in ManCirculation Research, 1974
- Circulatory Responses to Stimulation of Left Ventricular Receptors in the CatActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1973
- Circulation: Overall RegulationAnnual Review of Physiology, 1972
- Whole-Body Circulatory Autoregulation and HypertensionCirculation Research, 1971
- Effects of Guanethidine, Reserpine, and Methyldopa on Reflex Venous and Arterial Constriction in Man*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1964