Catecholamines and Haemodynamics in Fixed Essential Hypertension
- 1 December 1979
- journal article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Clinical Science
- Vol. 57 (s5) , 193s-196s
- https://doi.org/10.1042/cs057193s
Abstract
1. Arterial plasma catecholamines and haemodynamic status were simultaneously studied in 27 patients with fixed essential hypertension (WHO I—II). 2. Total arterial plasma catecholamines were found to be directly related to mean arterial pressure and to calculated total peripheral resistance, and they were inversely related to stroke index. 3. The degree of total peripheral resistance reduction after α-receptor blockade (phentolamine 10 mg intravenously) and the degree of mean arterial pressure reduction after combined α- and β-receptor blockade (labetalol 100 mg intravenously) were directly related to pretreatment plasma catecholamine concentrations. 4. These findings support the view that the sympathetic nervous system, as evaluated by plasma catecholamine concentration, may have an important role in maintaining hypertension in a subgroup of patients, contributing mainly to the degree of peripheral vasoconstriction.Keywords
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