Acute effects of arterial baroreflex on sympathetic nerve activity and plasma norepinephrine concentration

作者:Kawada Toru*; Akiyama Tsuyoshi; Shimizu Shuji; Sata Yusuke; Turner Michael J; Shirai Mikiyasu; Sugimachi Masaru
来源:Autonomic Neuroscience-Basic & Clinical, 2014, 186: 62-68.
DOI:10.1016/j.autneu.2014.10.016

摘要

Arterial pressure (AP) elevates as a logarithmic function of exogenously administered dose of norepinephrine (NE). In contrast, AP is nearly linearly correlated with efferent sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) during acute baroreflex intervention. The present study aimed at quantifying the relationship between SNA and plasma NE concentration during acute baroreflex intervention. Carotid sinus regions were isolated from systemic circulation in five Wistar Kyoto rats, and carotid sinus pressure was changed among 60, 100, 120, 140, and 180 mm Hg every 2 min. Arterial blood (0.2 ml) was obtained at each pressure level for plasma NE measurement. Maximum AP and minimum AP were 153.34 +/- 6.28 and 67.31 +/- 4.92 mm Hg, respectively, in response to pressure perturbation. Plasma NE correlated linearly with SNA for individual animal data (slope: 0.957 +/- 0.090 pg.ml(-1).%(-1), intercept: 46.57 +/- 7.22 pg/ml.r(2): ranged from 0.923 to 0.992) and also for group averaged data (NE = 0.956 x SNA + 47.97, r(2) = 0.982). Blockade of neuronal NE uptake by intravenous desipramine (1 mg/kg) administration increased the slope (2.966 +/- 0.686 pg.ml(-1).%(-1) P < 0.05) and the intercept (168.73 +/- 28.53 pg/ml, P < 0.01) of the plasma NE-SNA relationship. These results indicate that the relationship between SNA and plasma NE concentration was nearly linear within the normal physiological range of acute baroreflex control of AP. While plasma NE concentration can reflect changes in SNA, it may also overestimate the sympathetic outflow from the central nervous system when neuronal NE uptake is impaired systemically.

  • 出版日期2014-12