Acute Suppression of Muscle Sympathetic Nerve Activity by Hydrocortisone in Humans
- 1 March 2000
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 35 (3) , 758-763
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.35.3.758
Abstract
Abstract —In the present study, we examined the acute influence of hydrocortisone on human sympathetic nerve activity and cardiovascular parameters. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSA), heart rate, and blood pressure were monitored in 8 healthy subjects (20 to 37 years old) before and after a bolus injection of 50 mg hydrocortisone followed by a continuous infusion at 50 mg/h during a period of 3 hours in a placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover protocol. Recordings were performed at rest and during repeated transient sympathoexcitation induced by voluntary apneas. Resting MSA and endogenous serum cortisol concentrations were also measured in a larger study group (49 experiments, 25 subjects). During the experimental period, MSA burst number increased by 56% from the control level in the placebo group. In contrast, MSA was suppressed by 25% at the end of the hydrocortisone infusion, resulting in a significant treatment effect ( P P <0.05 between groups). No correlation was found between basal MSA and basal cortisol levels. Our results indicate that pharmacological doses of hydrocortisone acutely influence MSA responses to short- and long-lasting environmental stimuli, whereas basal native cortisol levels do not appear to be tonically involved in the regulation of resting MSA. The suppressive hydrocortisone effect is most likely induced via supraspinal autonomic centers and cannot be explained by peripheral steroid mechanisms. The effect of elevated corticosteroid levels on sympathetic nerve discharge may be an important mechanism in cardiovascular adaptations to stress.Keywords
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