Vongpatanasin W, Tuncel M, Mansour Y, Arbique D, Victor R G
Division of Hypertension, Donald W. Reynolds Cardiovascular Clinical Research Center, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, USA.
Circulation. 2001 Jun 19;103(24):2903-8. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.103.24.2903.
Menopause heralds a dramatic increase in incident hypertension, suggesting a protective effect of estrogen on blood pressure (BP). In female rats, estrogen has been shown to decrease sympathetic nerve discharge (SND) and BP. SND, however, has not been recorded during estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) in humans. Methods and Results-In 12 normotensive postmenopausal women, we conducted a randomized crossover placebo-controlled study to test whether chronic ERT caused a sustained decrease in SND and BP. Twenty-four-hour ambulatory BP, SND, and arterial baroreflex sensitivity were measured before and after 8 weeks of transdermal estradiol (200 microgram/d), oral conjugated estrogens (0.625 mg/d), or placebo. To test the acute effects of estrogen on SND, additional studies were performed in the same women receiving intravenous conjugated estrogens or sublingual estradiol. After 8 weeks of transdermal ERT, the basal rate of SND decreased by 30% (from 40+/-4 to 27+/-4 bursts per minute, P=0.0001) and ambulatory diastolic BP fell by 5+/-2 mm Hg (P=0.0003). In contrast, SND and BP were unaffected either by 8 weeks of oral ERT or by acute estrogen administration. Neither transdermal nor oral ERT had any effects on baroreflex sensitivity.
In normotensive postmenopausal women, chronic transdermal ERT decreases SND without augmenting arterial baroreflexes and causes a small but statistically significant decrease in ambulatory BP. Sympathetic inhibition is evident only with chronic rather than acute estrogen administration, implying a genomic mechanism of action. Because the effects of transdermal ERT are larger than those of oral ERT, the route of administration may be an important consideration in optimizing the beneficial effects of ERT on BP and overall cardiovascular health.
绝经预示着高血压发病率急剧上升,提示雌激素对血压(BP)有保护作用。在雌性大鼠中,已证实雌激素可减少交感神经放电(SND)和降低血压。然而,在人类雌激素替代疗法(ERT)期间尚未记录到SND。方法与结果——在12名血压正常的绝经后女性中,我们进行了一项随机交叉安慰剂对照研究,以测试长期ERT是否会导致SND和血压持续下降。在接受经皮雌二醇(200微克/天)、口服结合雌激素(0.625毫克/天)或安慰剂治疗8周前后,测量24小时动态血压、SND和动脉压力反射敏感性。为了测试雌激素对SND的急性影响,在同一组接受静脉注射结合雌激素或舌下含服雌二醇的女性中进行了额外的研究。经皮ERT治疗8周后,SND的基础速率下降了30%(从每分钟40±4次爆发降至27±4次爆发,P = 0.0001),动态舒张压下降了5±2毫米汞柱(P = 0.0003)。相比之下,口服ERT 8周或急性给予雌激素对SND和血压均无影响。经皮和口服ERT对压力反射敏感性均无任何影响。
在血压正常的绝经后女性中,长期经皮ERT可降低SND而不增强动脉压力反射,并导致动态血压出现小幅度但具有统计学意义的下降。交感神经抑制仅在长期而非急性给予雌激素时明显,这意味着存在基因组作用机制。由于经皮ERT的效果大于口服ERT,给药途径可能是优化ERT对血压和整体心血管健康有益作用的重要考虑因素。