Grassi G, Seravalle G, Cattaneo B M, Bolla G B, Lanfranchi A, Colombo M, Giannattasio C, Brunani A, Cavagnini F, Mancia G
Cattedra di Medicina Interna, Università di Milano, Ospedale S. Gerardo, Monza, Italy.
Hypertension. 1995 Apr;25(4 Pt 1):560-3. doi: 10.1161/01.hyp.25.4.560.
Human obesity is characterized by profound alterations in the hemodynamic and metabolic states. Whether these alterations involve sympathetic drive is controversial. In 10 young obese subjects (body mass index, 40.5 +/- 1.2 kg/m2, mean +/- SEM) with normal blood pressure and 8 age-matched lean normotensive control subjects, we measured beat-to-beat arterial blood pressure (Finapres technique), heart rate (electrocardiogram), postganglionic muscle sympathetic nerve activity (microneurography at the peroneal nerve), and venous plasma norepinephrine (high-performance liquid chromatography). The measurements were performed in baseline conditions and, with the exception of plasma norepinephrine, during baroreceptor stimulation and deactivation caused by increases and reductions of blood pressure via intravenous infusions of phenylephrine and nitroprusside. Baseline blood pressure and heart rate were similar in obese and control subjects. Plasma norepinephrine was also similar in the two groups. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity, however, was 38.6 +/- 5.1 bursts per minute in obese subjects and less than half that level in control subjects (18.7 +/- 1.3 bursts per minute), the difference being highly statistically significant (P < .02). Muscle sympathetic nerve activity and heart rate were reduced during phenylephrine infusion and increased during nitroprusside infusion, but the changes were about half as great in obese subjects as in control subjects. Thus, even in the absence of any blood pressure alteration, human obesity is characterized by a marked sympathetic activation, possibly because of an impairment of reflex sympathetic restraint. This may be involved in the high rate of hypertension and cardiovascular complications seen in obesity.
人类肥胖的特征是血液动力学和代谢状态发生深刻改变。这些改变是否涉及交感神经驱动存在争议。在10名血压正常的年轻肥胖受试者(体重指数,40.5±1.2kg/m²,平均值±标准误)和8名年龄匹配的瘦型血压正常对照受试者中,我们测量了逐搏动脉血压(Finapres技术)、心率(心电图)、节后肌肉交感神经活动(腓总神经微神经ography)和静脉血浆去甲肾上腺素(高效液相色谱法)。测量在基线条件下进行,除血浆去甲肾上腺素外,在通过静脉输注去氧肾上腺素和硝普钠升高和降低血压引起的压力感受器刺激和失活期间也进行了测量。肥胖和对照受试者的基线血压和心率相似。两组的血浆去甲肾上腺素也相似。然而,肥胖受试者的肌肉交感神经活动为每分钟38.6±5.1次爆发,而对照受试者的水平不到该水平的一半(每分钟18.7±1.3次爆发),差异具有高度统计学意义(P<.02)。在输注去氧肾上腺素期间,肌肉交感神经活动和心率降低,在输注硝普钠期间增加,但肥胖受试者的变化约为对照受试者的一半。因此,即使在没有任何血压改变的情况下,人类肥胖的特征也是明显的交感神经激活,这可能是由于反射性交感神经抑制受损所致。这可能与肥胖中高血压和心血管并发症的高发生率有关。