Grassi Guido, Seravalle Gino, Trevano Fosca Quarti, Dell'oro Raffaella, Bolla Gianbattista, Cuspidi Cesare, Arenare Francesca, Mancia Giuseppe
Clinica Medica, Università Milano-Bicocca, Ospedale S Gerardo, Monza, Italy.
Hypertension. 2007 Sep;50(3):537-42. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.107.092528. Epub 2007 Jul 9.
Patients with hypertension exhibit an increased sympathetic activity. No information exists as to whether this is the case in normotensive individuals in whom there is an increased ambulatory blood pressure, a condition termed "masked" hypertension. We studied 18 middle-aged subjects with masked hypertension in whom we measured muscle sympathetic nerve traffic (peroneal nerve and microneurography) and beat-to-beat arterial blood pressure at rest and during baroreceptor deactivation and activation. Measurements also included anthropometric values and insulin sensitivity (homeostasis model assessment index). Data were compared with those of 20 normotensive subjects, 18 subjects with white-coat hypertension, and 20 patients with "in-office" and "out-of-office" hypertension. All of the individuals were pharmacologically untreated and age-matched with subjects with masked hypertension. Patients with in- and out-of-office and white-coat hypertension displayed resting sympathetic nerve activity values significantly greater than normotensive subjects (75.8+/-2.5 and 70.8+/-2.2 versus 45.5+/-2.0 bursts per 100 heartbeats respectively; P<0.01). This was the case also for masked hypertension (73.5+/-2.4 bursts per 100 heartbeats; P<0.01), the degree of the sympathetic activation being similar for magnitude to that seen in the other 2 hypertensive conditions. Compared with normotensive subjects, baroreflex-heart rate control was significantly attenuated in all of the hypertensive states, whereas baroreflex-sympathetic control was unaffected. Homeostasis model assessment index was increased in patients with in- and out-of-office and white-coat hypertension, with a further increase in masked hypertension and a direct relation with resting sympathetic nerve traffic (r=0.46; P<0.01). These data provide the first evidence that masked hypertension is characterized by a marked sympathetic overdrive. They further show that the neurogenic alterations are coupled with metabolic and baroreflex abnormalities.
高血压患者表现出交感神经活动增强。对于动态血压升高(一种称为“隐匿性”高血压的情况)的血压正常个体是否也是如此,目前尚无相关信息。我们研究了18名患有隐匿性高血压的中年受试者,测量了他们静息时以及压力感受器失活和激活期间的肌肉交感神经活动(腓总神经和微神经ography)和逐搏动脉血压。测量还包括人体测量值和胰岛素敏感性(稳态模型评估指数)。将数据与20名血压正常的受试者、18名白大衣高血压受试者以及20名“诊室”和“诊室外”高血压患者的数据进行了比较。所有个体均未接受药物治疗,且与隐匿性高血压受试者年龄匹配。“诊室”和“诊室外”高血压患者以及白大衣高血压患者的静息交感神经活动值显著高于血压正常的受试者(分别为每100次心跳75.8±2.5次和70.8±2.2次,而血压正常的受试者为45.5±2.0次;P<0.01)。隐匿性高血压患者也是如此(每100次心跳73.5±2.4次;P<0.01),交感神经激活程度在幅度上与其他两种高血压情况相似。与血压正常的受试者相比,所有高血压状态下压力反射-心率控制均显著减弱,而压力反射-交感神经控制未受影响。“诊室”和“诊室外”高血压患者以及白大衣高血压患者的稳态模型评估指数升高,隐匿性高血压患者进一步升高,且与静息交感神经活动呈直接相关(r=0.46;P<0.01)。这些数据首次证明隐匿性高血压的特征是明显的交感神经过度驱动。它们进一步表明神经源性改变与代谢和压力反射异常相关。