Briant L J B, Charkoudian N, Hart E C
Clinical Research and Imaging Centre, Cardionomics Group, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, MA, USA.
Exp Physiol. 2016 Feb;101(2):219-29. doi: 10.1113/EP085368.
What is the topic of this review? Hypertension is a major problem in Western society. Risk of hypertension increases with age, especially in women, who have lower risk compared with men until menopause. This review outlines the sex differences in the sympathetic control of blood pressure and how these mechanisms change with age. What advances does it highlight? It has recently been recognized that men and women regulate blood pressure by different physiological mechanisms. This is important for both the understanding and the clinical management of individual patients with hypertension. This review summarizes recent advances in understanding how the regulation of blood pressure in hypertension by the sympathetic nervous system differs between men and women. The sympathetic nervous system has a central role in the regulation of arterial blood pressure (BP) and in the development of hypertension in humans. Recent evidence points to differences between the sexes in the integrative mechanisms by which BP is controlled, suggesting that the development of hypertension may follow distinct pathways in women compared with men. An important aspect of sympathetic control of BP is its substantial interindividual variability. In healthy young men, the variability in sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) is balanced by variability in cardiac output and vascular adrenergic responses, such that BP remains similar, and normal, across a severalfold range of resting SNA values. In young women, variability in resting SNA is similar to that seen in men, but the 'balancing' mechanisms are strikingly different; women exhibit greater β-adrenergic vasodilatation compared with men, which minimizes the pressor effects of a given level of SNA. Ageing is associated with increased SNA and a loss of the balancing factors seen in younger people, leading to an increased risk of hypertension in older people. Loss of oestrogen with menopause in women appears to be linked mechanistically with the decrease in β-adrenergic vasodilatation and the increased risk of hypertension in older women. Other important factors contributing to hypertension via sympathetic mechanisms are obesity and arterial stiffening, both of which increase with ageing. We conclude with a discussion of important areas in which more work is needed to understand and manage appropriately the sex-specific mechanisms in the development and maintenance of hypertension.
这篇综述的主题是什么?高血压是西方社会的一个主要问题。高血压风险随年龄增长而增加,尤其是在女性中,在绝经前女性患高血压的风险低于男性。这篇综述概述了血压交感神经控制方面的性别差异以及这些机制如何随年龄变化。它突出了哪些进展?最近人们认识到,男性和女性通过不同的生理机制调节血压。这对于理解和临床管理个体高血压患者都很重要。这篇综述总结了在理解交感神经系统对高血压患者血压调节在男性和女性之间存在差异方面的最新进展。交感神经系统在人体动脉血压(BP)调节和高血压发展中起核心作用。最近的证据表明,在控制血压的整合机制方面存在性别差异,这表明与男性相比,女性高血压的发展可能遵循不同的途径。血压交感神经控制的一个重要方面是其个体间的显著变异性。在健康的年轻男性中,交感神经活动(SNA)的变异性通过心输出量和血管肾上腺素能反应的变异性得到平衡,从而使血压在静息SNA值的数倍范围内保持相似且正常。在年轻女性中,静息SNA的变异性与男性相似,但“平衡”机制明显不同;与男性相比,女性表现出更大的β-肾上腺素能血管舒张,这使给定水平的SNA的升压作用最小化。衰老与SNA增加以及年轻人中所见的平衡因素丧失有关,导致老年人患高血压的风险增加。女性绝经后雌激素的丧失似乎在机制上与β-肾上腺素能血管舒张的减少以及老年女性高血压风险增加有关。通过交感神经机制导致高血压的其他重要因素是肥胖和动脉僵硬,两者都随年龄增长而增加。我们最后讨论了一些重要领域,在这些领域中需要开展更多工作,以更好地理解和适当管理高血压发生和维持过程中的性别特异性机制。