Abstract-Blood pressure reactivity is enhanced in young black subjects through mechanisms that are poorly understood.We compared ␣-adrenergic-mediated vasoconstrictor and -adrenergic vasodilator sensitivity and their relation to sympathetic activity in blacks and whites. Ten healthy black (age, 29.9Ϯ2.4 years) and 10 white (age, 28.3Ϯ1.9 years) men were studied. Forearm blood flow was measured with strain-gauge plethysmography after the intrabrachial artery administration of phenylephrine (1.25 to 20 g/min) and isoproterenol (60 and 400 ng/min) after application of lower-body negative pressure and after a cold pressor test. Forearm and systemic norepinephrine spillover were measured with a radioisotope dilution technique. ␣-Adrenergic vasoconstriction was markedly increased (ANOVA Pϭ0.008) and -adrenergic vasodilation decreased (ANOVA Pϭ0.02) in blacks. Phenylephrine (10 g/min) decreased forearm blood flow by 58.0Ϯ2.5% in blacks but only by 26.6Ϯ6.0% in whites (PϽ0.001). Vasoconstrictor response to endogenous norepinephrine, stimulated by a cold pressor test, resulted in a higher forearm vascular resistance in blacks than in whites (107.3Ϯ13 versus 64.8Ϯ13 mm Hg ⅐ mL Ϫ1 ⅐ 100 mL Ϫ1 , Pϭ0.03). There were no significant ethnic differences in basal or stimulated forearm or systemic norepinephrine spillover. Increased vasoconstrictor and decreased vasodilator responses in blacks were not correlated. Increased sympathetically mediated vascular tone caused by enhanced vasoconstriction and attenuated vasodilation, effects that would be additive, and not increased sympathetic activity could enhance vascular reactivity and may play a role in the pathogenesis of hypertension in blacks.
A threefold higher area under the plasma drug concentration-time curve (AUC) of nifedipine, a substrate of cytochrome P4503A (CYP3A), has been shown in Southern Asians when compared with Caucasians. To determine if these differences are specific to nifedipine or apply to other substrates of CYP3A, we examined the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of 0.375 mg triazolam, another substrate of CYP3A, in eight healthy Caucasians and eight healthy Southern Asians in a double-blind placebo-controlled study. When compared with Caucasians, Southern Asians achieved higher maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) (8.0 +/- 2.6 vs 4.8 +/- 1.9 ng ml-1; the 95% confidence interval (CI) of the mean difference was 0.76 to 5.7; P < 0.01) and had a shorter time to reach maximal concentration (tmax) (45 min (range 30-75) vs 90 min (range 60-145); the 95% CI of the mean difference was -69 to -20; P < 0.002). Triazolam AUC, clearance and partial metabolic clearance did not differ significantly between Southern Asians and Caucasians. Significant differences were found in postural sway after triazolam when compared with placebo in both Caucasians (double stance: eyes open (DSEO): 172.9 +/- 82.9 vs 1138.9 +/- 1182.4; the 95% CI of the mean difference was -1897.2 to -34.4; P < 0.04; and Southern Asians (DSEO: 216.2 +/- 80.9 vs 1086.0 +/- 827.1; the 95% CI of the mean difference was -1564.2 to -175.6; P = 0.02; double stance: eyes closed (DSEC): 207.5 +/- 89.8 vs 1156.9 +/- 932.1; the 95% CI of the mean difference was -1718.5 to -178.5; P = 0.02; with no significant difference between the two ethnic groups. These results suggest that the large inter-ethnic difference in nifedipine clearance are not generalizable to all CYP3A4 substrates.
To determine whether alpha2-adrenergic-mediated sympathoinhibition was altered in chronic heart failure, sympathoinhibitory sensitivity was assessed using the alpha2-adrenergic agonist clonidine in 7 patients with heart failure and in 10 healthy control subjects. Basal norepinephrine spillover was significantly higher in patients with heart failure (1.3+/-0.3 microg/min) than in control subjects (0.7+/-0.1 microg/min, P=.05). Compared with control subjects, the decrement in norepinephrine spillover to cumulative doses of clonidine (1, 2, and 3 microg/kg administered intravenously) was significantly less in patients with heart failure (P<.05). Blood pressure also tended to decrease less in patients with heart failure (P=.06). The doses of clonidine required to produce a 10% decrease in blood pressure and a 25% decrease in norepinephrine spillover were significantly higher in heart failure (P<.01 and P=.05, respectively). Thus, although clonidine lowers norepinephrine spillover significantly in patients with heart failure, such patients are less sensitive to clonidine than healthy control subjects. This difference in sensitivity suggests that doses of clonidine provide effective sympathoinhibition will need to be selected for studies that will evaluate the potential therapeutic effect of clonidine in heart failure.
Administration of estrogen has vascular effects through poorly defined mechanisms that may include sympathetic withdrawal. To define the effects of acute estrogen administration on sympathetic responses, nineteen healthy postmenopausal women (age 54+/-2 years) were studied after application of a placebo or estrogen patch for 36 hours, in random order. A p-value, adjusted for multiple comparisons, of <0.017 was used to determine statistical significance. Heart rate, blood pressure, and norepinephrine spillover were measured at rest, during mental stress (Stroop test), and during a cold pressor test. Estrogen did not attenuate basal or stimulated hemodynamic responses significantly. The increase in mean arterial pressure after the Stroop test (5.9+/-1.2mm/ Hg on placebo vs 6.1+/-1.6mm/Hg on estrogen, p=0.9) and after the cold pressor test (12.6+/-2.4mm/Hg on placebo vs 13.0+/-2.2 mm/Hg on estrogen, p=0.8) did not differ. Basal, mental stress and cold pressor-stimulated norepinephrine spillover were not significantly affected by short-term estrogen administration. Norepinephrine spillover tended to be higher after estrogen (1296.2+/-238 ng/min) than placebo (832.5+/-129 ng/min) (p=0.02) at baseline and after the Stroop test (1881.1+/-330 ng/min vs 1014.6+/-249 ng/min) (p=0.02). Acute transdermal estrogen administration did not attenuate norepinephrine spillover or sympathetically mediated hemodynamic responses.
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