Literature DB >> 7512466

Stress response and antihypertensive treatment.

P Nazzaro1, M Merlo, M Manzari, G Cicco, A Pirrelli.   

Abstract

Results from many studies suggest that the central nervous system may play an important role in enhancing and maintaining sympathetic, metabolic and haemodynamic effects in patients with hypertension. Likewise, emotional and mental stresses may provoke phasic and sustained adrenergic responses in normotensive and untreated hypertensive patients. Because the various antihypertensive medications have different mechanisms of action, and elicit different neurovegetative responses, it is useful to distinguish between the effects of different treatments on sympathetic activity. To identify the effect of stress on sympathetic reactivity, we evaluated the extracardiovascular and haemodynamic responses to various stressor agents using noninvasive techniques. This psychophysiological approach allowed us to standardise stress, to identify individual cardioneurovegetative responses both before and during treatment, and to establish the effects of various treatments on the cardioneurovegetative response. The extracardiovascular psychophysiological response of patients with a family history of hypertension and of normotensive patients who later became hypertensive was characterised by an inability to recover after mental challenge. Therefore, prolonged sympathetic activity resulting from mental stimulation may contribute to the development of hypertension. Antihypertensive medications affected sympathetic reactivity differently. For example, nifedipine worsened sympathetic reactivity, while verapamil was able to correct abnormal neuroadrenergic responses. Furthermore, verapamil was successfully combined with enalapril in patients whose hypertension was resistant to monotherapy with the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor. Therefore, the functional and structural consequences of sympathetic stimulation resulting from daily activation and pharmacological blood pressure adjustments are important in hypertensive patients, because they may have abnormal sympathetic reactivity to various stimuli.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 7512466     DOI: 10.2165/00003495-199300462-00022

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drugs        ISSN: 0012-6667            Impact factor:   9.546


  26 in total

Review 1.  Are different hemodynamic patterns of antihypertensive drugs clinically important?

Authors:  S Julius
Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 2.953

2.  Stimulation of skin sympathetic nerve discharge by central command. Differential control of sympathetic outflow to skin and skeletal muscle during static exercise.

Authors:  S F Vissing; U Scherrer; R G Victor
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  1991-07       Impact factor: 17.367

3.  A major effect of recording site on measurement of electrodermal activity.

Authors:  A S Scerbo; L W Freedman; A Raine; M E Dawson; P H Venables
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  1992-03       Impact factor: 4.016

4.  Dissociation of sympathetic nerve activity in arm and leg muscle during mental stress.

Authors:  E A Anderson; B G Wallin; A L Mark
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  1987-06       Impact factor: 10.190

Review 5.  Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: research and clinical applications.

Authors:  G Mancia
Journal:  J Hypertens Suppl       Date:  1990-12

6.  [Psychophysiologic markers of arterial hypertension].

Authors:  P Nazzaro; M Manzari; M Merlo; A Pirrelli
Journal:  Boll Soc Ital Biol Sper       Date:  1991-12

7.  Blood pressure during normal daily activities, sleep, and exercise. Comparison of values in normal and hypertensive subjects.

Authors:  T G Pickering; G A Harshfield; H D Kleinert; S Blank; J H Laragh
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1982-02-19       Impact factor: 56.272

8.  Anxiety, anger, and neurogenic tone at rest and in stress in patients with primary hypertension.

Authors:  P Sullivan; S Schoentgen; V DeQuattro; W Procci; D Levine; J Van der Meulen; J Bornheimer
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  1981 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 10.190

9.  Evaluation of hypertension and related target organ damage by average day-time blood pressure.

Authors:  A C Pessina; P Palatini; G Sperti; L Cordone; M Libardoni; L Mos; P Mormino; A Di Marco; C Dal Palù
Journal:  Clin Exp Hypertens A       Date:  1985

Review 10.  Plasma catecholamines and essential hypertension. An analytical review.

Authors:  D S Goldstein
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  1983 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 10.190

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