We directly measured the net pulmonary extraction of circulating norepinephrine, epinephrine and dopamine in control patients and patients with primary or secondary pulmonary hypertension. Mixed pulmonary artery norepinephrine, epinephrine and dopamine were 314 +/- 13 pg/ml, 102 +/- 9 pg/ml, 51 +/- 5 pg/ml, respectively, for the control group; values were similar in patients with pulmonary hypertension. The pulmonary extraction of norepinephrine was 25.4 +/- 2.6% (clearance 266 +/- 62 ng/min) in control patients; epinephrine and dopamine were not extracted. There was no net extraction or production of any of the three catecholamines by the lungs in any of the patients with pulmonary hypertension. We conclude that the lungs play a significant role in the inactivation of circulating norepinephrine in man. This metabolic function of the lungs appear to be lost in pulmonary hypertension.
1. The metabolism of (+/-)-norcamphor, (+)-camphor, (-)-camphor, (+)-epicamphor, (+/-)-camphorquinone, (+/-)-camphane-2,5-dione and camphane was investigated in rabbits. All the compounds except camphane-2,5-dione increased the content of glucuronide in the urine. 2. (+/-)-Norcamphor was reduced to endo-norborneol; (+)-camphor, contrary to expectation, was reduced to (+)-borneol, as well as being hydroxylated to (+)-5-endo-hydroxycamphor and (+)-3-endo-hydroxycamphor, 5-endo-hydroxycamphor being the predominant product. (+)-Epicamphor was reduced mainly to (+)-epiborneol; (+/-)-camphorquinone gave 3-endo-hydroxycamphor and 2-endo-hydroxyepicamphor, the former being the major metabolite. (+/-)-Camphane-2,5-dione was reduced to 5-endo-hydroxycamphor. Camphane was hydroxylated to borneol and epiborneol, the latter predominating. 3. An explanation of these findings is given in terms of steric hindrance and thermodynamic stability. 4. The possibility was investigated that NADH was involved in the reductions.
The development of heart failure in the cardiomyopathic hamster is associated with a decrease in norepinephrine stores and parallel increases in cardiac sympathetic tone and tyrosine hydroxylase activity. Despite the increase in tyrosine hydroxylase, cardiac norepinephrine synthesis does not increase in heart failure. In this study, we have shown that an accumulation of cardiac dopamine accompanies the decline of cardiac norepinephrine. The abnormal content of norepinephrine and of dopamine in the decompensating hamster heart is restored to normal by peripheral ganglionic blockade. The acute increase in cardiac sympathetic tone induced by immobilization stress in control hamsters mimics the alterations in cardiac catecholamine distribution found in heart failure. Other investigators have demonstrated similar alterations in the catecholamine content of the rat submaxillary gland and adrenal medulla following an increase in sympathetic input to these organs. We conclude that the increase in cardiac sympathetic tone in the late stages of hamster cardiomyopathy appears to lead to a shift in the rate-limiting step for norepinephrine synthesis from the hydroxylation of tyrosine to the hydroxylation of dopamine. There is evidence that this shift which results in an accumulation of dopamine in the noradrenergic nerve terminals of the heart is a general manifestaion of augmented sympathetic nerve traffic rather than a peculiarity of hamster cardiomyopathy.
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