Modan M, Halkin H
Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel-Hashomer, Israel.
Diabetes Care. 1991 Jun;14(6):470-87. doi: 10.2337/diacare.14.6.470.
The association of obesity with hypertension has been amply demonstrated in cross-sectional, longitudinal, and dietary-intervention studies, but the mechanisms remain enigmatic. Both conditions are independently characterized by similar metabolic alterations, i.e., glucose intolerance, dyslipoproteinemia, elevated serum uric acid, and inadequate Na+ transport. Obesity, hypertension, and these metabolic alterations are associated with hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance. The degree of these alterations is lowest in lean hypertensives, intermediate in obese normotensives, and greatest in obese hypertensives, but mortality risk is highest in lean hypertensives. This apparent discrepancy may be related to the divergent hemodynamic characteristics, possibly indicating different etiology, of lean and obese hypertensives, i.e., contracted blood volume, increased total vascular peripheral resistance, and normal sympathetic drive in the former, expanded blood volume, normal peripheral resistance, and increased sympathetic drive in the latter. Current knowledge suggests that the interrelationships of obesity and hypertension with the metabolic alterations could be mediated by high carbohydrate and fat consumption and low physical activity, resulting in obesity and separate pathways in hyperinsulinemia and increased sympathetic drive, leading to a double vicious cycle. In one, hyperinsulinemia and the consequent insulin resistance would compound one another. In the second, the increasing hyperinsulinemia would increasingly stimulate the sympathetic nervous system. This double vicious cycle could result in increasing hemodynamic and metabolic derangements causing hypertension, diabetes, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). The association of lean hypertension with ASCVD may be through other mechanisms, e.g., hemodynamic forces on the vascular endothelium.
肥胖与高血压之间的关联已在横断面研究、纵向研究和饮食干预研究中得到充分证实,但其机制仍不明朗。这两种情况各自的特征都是类似的代谢改变,即葡萄糖耐量异常、血脂蛋白异常血症、血清尿酸升高以及钠转运不足。肥胖、高血压以及这些代谢改变都与高胰岛素血症/胰岛素抵抗有关。这些改变的程度在瘦型高血压患者中最低,在肥胖正常血压者中处于中等水平,而在肥胖高血压患者中最高,但瘦型高血压患者的死亡风险最高。这种明显的差异可能与瘦型和肥胖型高血压患者不同的血流动力学特征有关,这可能表明其病因不同,即前者血容量减少、总血管外周阻力增加且交感神经驱动力正常,而后者血容量增加、外周阻力正常且交感神经驱动力增加。目前的知识表明,肥胖和高血压与代谢改变之间的相互关系可能是由高碳水化合物和脂肪摄入以及低体力活动介导的,从而导致肥胖以及高胰岛素血症和交感神经驱动力增加的不同途径,进而形成双重恶性循环。在一个循环中,高胰岛素血症及其导致的胰岛素抵抗会相互加剧。在第二个循环中,不断增加的高胰岛素血症会越来越多地刺激交感神经系统。这种双重恶性循环可能导致血流动力学和代谢紊乱不断加剧,从而引发高血压、糖尿病和动脉粥样硬化性心血管疾病(ASCVD)。瘦型高血压与ASCVD之间的关联可能是通过其他机制,例如血管内皮上的血流动力学作用力。