Chrysant S G
Oklahoma Cardiovascular and Hypertension Center and The University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City 73132-4904, USA.
Am Heart J. 1998 Feb;135(2 Pt 2):S21-30. doi: 10.1053/hj.1998.v135.86971.
Chronic sustained hypertension leads to structural changes of the small and large arteries. These alterations consist of smooth-muscle hypertrophy, increased deposition of collagen, and "dilution" or destruction of elastin fibers. In addition, there may be no growth at all, but a "rearrangement" of vascular wall material termed "remodeling." These changes serve to increase wall thickness and the media-to-lumen ratio and to decrease the external and internal diameter of the vessel--all of which contribute to increased systemic vascular resistance by the small arteries and increased impedance by the larger arteries. It has been suggested that these structural changes are an adaptive effort by the vessel to maintain a constancy of wall tension, but the end result is detrimental in that the effect is a further increase in systemic vascular resistance and blood-flow impedance, which lead to left ventricular hypertrophy and its consequences. The stimuli for these changes are stretch stimuli, mediated through stretch receptors on the arterial wall, and trophic stimuli mediated at the tissue level through the action of angiotensin II, aldosterone, and catecholamines. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, especially those with effective tissue penetration, are ideal drugs to reverse these structural changes ("reverse remodeling"), decrease the systemic vascular resistance, and increase the vascular compliance. These agents exert their effects through suppression, at the tissue level, of angiotensin II, aldosterone, catecholamines, endothelins (ET1, ET3), and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) and through an increase in local levels of kinins, prostaglandins, and nitric oxide, which have antigrowth effects. Although this is a class effect, it appears to be stronger with those angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors providing the greatest tissue penetration.
慢性持续性高血压会导致小动脉和大动脉的结构改变。这些改变包括平滑肌肥大、胶原蛋白沉积增加以及弹性纤维的“稀释”或破坏。此外,可能根本没有生长,而是血管壁物质的“重新排列”,即所谓的“重塑”。这些变化会增加血管壁厚度和中膜与管腔的比例,并减小血管的外径和内径,所有这些都会导致小动脉的全身血管阻力增加以及大动脉的阻抗增加。有人认为这些结构变化是血管为维持壁张力恒定而做出的适应性努力,但最终结果是有害的,因为其效果是全身血管阻力和血流阻抗进一步增加,从而导致左心室肥大及其后果。这些变化的刺激因素包括通过动脉壁上的牵张感受器介导的牵张刺激,以及通过血管紧张素II、醛固酮和儿茶酚胺的作用在组织水平介导的营养刺激。血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂,尤其是那些具有有效组织穿透力的抑制剂,是逆转这些结构变化(“逆转重塑”)、降低全身血管阻力并增加血管顺应性的理想药物。这些药物通过在组织水平抑制血管紧张素II、醛固酮、儿茶酚胺、内皮素(ET1、ET3)和转化生长因子-β1(TGF-β1),并通过增加具有抗生长作用的激肽、前列腺素和一氧化氮的局部水平来发挥作用。尽管这是一类药物的作用,但对于那些具有最大组织穿透力的血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂来说,这种作用似乎更强。