Anderson E A, Hoffman R P, Balon T W, Sinkey C A, Mark A L
Department of Anesthesia, College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City 52242.
J Clin Invest. 1991 Jun;87(6):2246-52. doi: 10.1172/JCI115260.
Hyperinsulinemia may contribute to hypertension by increasing sympathetic activity and vascular resistance. We sought to determine if insulin increases central sympathetic neural outflow and vascular resistance in humans. We recorded muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA; microneurography, peroneal nerve), forearm blood flow (plethysmography), heart rate, and blood pressure in 14 normotensive males during 1-h infusions of low (38 mU/m2/min) and high (76 mU/m2/min) doses of insulin while holding blood glucose constant. Plasma insulin rose from 8 +/- 1 microU/ml during control, to 72 +/- 8 and 144 +/- 13 microU/ml during the low and high insulin doses, respectively, and fell to 15 +/- 6 microU/ml 1 h after insulin infusion was stopped. MSNA, which averaged 21.5 +/- 1.5 bursts/min in control, increased significantly (P less than 0.001) during both the low and high doses of insulin (+/- 5.4 and +/- 9.3 bursts/min, respectively) and further increased during 1-h recovery (+15.2 bursts/min). Plasma norepinephrine levels (119 +/- 19 pg/ml during control) rose during both low (258 +/- 25; P less than 0.02) and high (285 +/- 95; P less than 0.01) doses of insulin and recovery (316 +/- 23; P less than 0.01). Plasma epinephrine levels did not change during insulin infusion. Despite the increased MSNA and plasma norepinephrine, there were significant (P less than 0.001) increases in forearm blood flow and decreases in forearm vascular resistance during both doses of insulin. Systolic pressure did not change significantly during infusion of insulin and diastolic pressure fell approximately 4-5 mmHg (P less than 0.01). This study suggests that acute increases in plasma insulin within the physiological range elevate sympathetic neural outflow but produce forearm vasodilation and do not elevate arterial pressure in normal humans.
高胰岛素血症可能通过增加交感神经活动和血管阻力而导致高血压。我们试图确定胰岛素是否会增加人体中枢交感神经传出冲动和血管阻力。我们记录了14名血压正常男性在持续1小时输注低剂量(38 mU/m²/分钟)和高剂量(76 mU/m²/分钟)胰岛素期间的肌肉交感神经活动(MSNA;微神经ography,腓总神经)、前臂血流量(体积描记法)、心率和血压,同时保持血糖恒定。血浆胰岛素在对照期间从8±1微单位/毫升升至低剂量胰岛素期间的72±8微单位/毫升和高剂量胰岛素期间的144±13微单位/毫升,并在胰岛素输注停止1小时后降至15±6微单位/毫升。MSNA在对照期间平均为21.5±1.5次爆发/分钟,在低剂量和高剂量胰岛素期间均显著增加(P<0.001)(分别为±5.4和±9.3次爆发/分钟),并在1小时恢复期间进一步增加(+15.2次爆发/分钟)。血浆去甲肾上腺素水平(对照期间为119±19皮克/毫升)在低剂量(258±25;P<0.02)和高剂量(285±95;P<0.01)胰岛素期间及恢复期间(316±23;P<0.01)均升高。血浆肾上腺素水平在胰岛素输注期间未发生变化。尽管MSNA和血浆去甲肾上腺素增加,但在两种剂量胰岛素期间前臂血流量均显著增加(P<0.001),前臂血管阻力降低。胰岛素输注期间收缩压无显著变化,舒张压下降约4-5 mmHg(P<0.01)。这项研究表明,生理范围内血浆胰岛素的急性增加会提高交感神经传出冲动,但会导致前臂血管舒张,且不会使正常人体动脉压升高。