Title of article :
Effects of Orthostatic Stress on Forearm Endothelial Function in Normal Subjects and in Patients With Hypertension, Diabetes, or Both Diseases
Author/Authors :
Marco Guazzi، نويسنده , , Laura Lenatti، نويسنده , , Gabriele Tumminello، نويسنده , , Maurizio D. Guazzi، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
9
From page :
986
To page :
994
Abstract :
Background Sympathetically mediated vasoconstriction, to compensate for reduced venous return and cardiac output, characterizes the circulatory adaptation to head-up tilting (HUT). It has not been clarified whether this is coupled with a modulating endothelial vasorelaxation and whether diseases causing endothelial dysfunction, such as diabetes and hypertension, may impair this counterregulatory mechanism. Methods In patients with hypertension (group 1), diabetes (group 2), or both diseases (group 3) and in healthy control subjects (12 subjects per group) we investigated the brachial artery vasodilating response to the release of distal circulatory arrest (DCA) while they were supine and during 60° HUT. Results The supine increase in lumen was smaller (P< .01) in groups 1 (+4.5% ± 1.5%), 2 (+4.8% ± 1.4%), and 3 (+3.9% ± 1.3%) than in the control group (+8.6% ± 1.6%). Vasorelaxation by nitroglycerin was similar in each population. During HUT, the lumen response to DCA was enhanced (P< .01 v supine) in control subjects (+15.4% ± 2.5%) and group 1 (+10.0 ± 2.4%) and was reduced (P< .01 v supine) in groups 2 (+2.9% ± 0.5%) and 3 (+2.1% ± 0.4%), even though the hyperemic reaction to DCA was similar. The ratio of lumen changes to changes in flow (mm/mL/min × 1000) during reactive hyperemia to DCA increased (P<.01) with HUT, compared with that in the supine position, in control subjects (1.75 v 1.19) and group 1 (1.61 v 0.95), and decreased (P< .01) in groups 2 (0.62 v 0.87) and 3 (0.48 v 0.77). Conclusions The HUT posture is characterized by an increased endothelium-dependent, flow-mediated vasodilation as a possible modulator of the neural vasoconstriction. This effect is persistent but blunted in hypertension and is abolished in diabetes, either alone or in association with high BP. Thus, vasoconstrictor factors could remain unmodulated during an event such as orthostasis, making the risk posed by these disorders more critical.
Keywords :
hypertension. , diabetes , endothelium , Head-up tilt
Journal title :
American Journal of Hypertension
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
American Journal of Hypertension
Record number :
649202
Link To Document :
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