Preeclampsia - A state of sympathetic overactivity

被引:407
作者
Schobel, HP [1 ]
Fischer, T [1 ]
Heuszer, K [1 ]
Geiger, H [1 ]
Schmieder, RE [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV ERLANGEN NURNBERG,DEPT OBSTET & GYNECOL,D-91054 ERLANGEN,GERMANY
关键词
D O I
10.1056/NEJM199611143352002
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background Preeclampsia is characterized by a marked increase in peripheral vascular resistance leading to an increase in blood pressure, but the triggering mechanisms are unclear. Methods To determine whether augmented sympathetic vasoconstrictor activity may be an important mechanism in mediating the increase in vasomotor tone, we measured postganglionic sympathetic-nerve activity in the blood vessels of skeletal muscle by means of intraneural microelectrodes in nine women with preeclampsia, eight normotensive pregnant women, six normotensive nonpregnant women, and seven nonpregnant women with hypertension, both at rest and during noninvasive cardiovascular-reflex testing (with the Valsalva maneuver and the cold presser test). Results The mean (+/-SE) rate of sympathetic nerve activity in the normotensive pregnant women (10+/-1 bursts per minute) was not significantly different from that in normotensive nonpregnant women (12+/-2 bursts per minute) or hypertensive nonpregnant women (15+/-3 bursts per minute). In contrast, the rate of sympathetic-nerve activity in the patients with preeclampsia (33+/-3 bursts per minute) was more than three times as high as that in the normotensive pregnant women (P<0.05) and more than twice as high as in the group of nonpregnant women with hypertension (P<0.05). Hemodynamic and sympathetic-nerve responses to both reflex tests did not differ significantly among the four groups. Six patients with preeclampsia were studied again after delivery; mean sympathetic-nerve activity at that time had decreased significantly from the value during pregnancy (from 36+/-4 to 13+/-2 bursts per minute, P<0.01), as had mean arterial pressure (from 118+/-3 to 96+/-1 mm Hg, P<0.01). Conclusions Preeclampsia is a state of sympathetic overactivity, which reverts to normal after delivery. Our data indicate that the increases in peripheral vascular resistance and blood pressure that characterize this disorder are mediated, at least in part, by a substantial increase in sympathetic vasoconstrictor activity. (C) 1996 Massachusetts Medical Society.
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页码:1480 / 1485
页数:6
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