NEURAL REGULATION OF SYMPATHETIC-NERVE ACTIVITY IN HEART-FAILURE

被引:141
作者
ZUCKER, IH
WANG, W
BRANDLE, M
SCHULTZ, HD
PATEL, KP
机构
[1] Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Nebraska College of Medicine, Omaha, NE
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0033-0620(05)80020-9
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
One of the hallmarks of chronic congestive heart failure is an increase in sympathetic tone to the peripheral circulation and to the heart. A correlation between plasma norepinephrine and the severity of the heart failure state has been demonstrated. One mechanism that has been proposed to account for this sympathoexcitation is a depression in the baroreflex and, perhaps, cardiac reflex control of sympathetic nerve activity. This review summarizes work from several laboratories, including our own, that documents a depressed baroreflex control of heart rate and sympathetic nerve activity in both animals and humans with heart failure. The mechanism of the depressed baroreflex most likely is caused by reduced baroreceptor sensitivity as well as enhanced input to the central nervous system from cardiac receptors that are chemosensitive. Although sympathetic tone and arterial baroreflex sensitivity are altered in heart failure, there have been no studies showing a cause-and-effect relationship. Increases in plasma norepinephrine are similar in baroreceptor-denervated and intact dogs paced into heart failure. This latter observation calls into question the traditional concept of baroreceptor-mediated increases in sympathetic tone in heart failure. © 1995 W.B. Saunders Company. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:397 / 414
页数:18
相关论文
共 114 条
  • [1] Cohn, Abnormalities of peripheral sympathetic nervous system control in congestive heart failure, Circulation, 82, (1990)
  • [2] Rector, Olivari, Levine, Et al., Predicting survival for an individual with congestive heart failure using plasma norepinephrine concentration, Am Heart J, 114, pp. 148-152, (1987)
  • [3] Riegger, Experimental models of heart failure: implications for renin and the kidney, Kidney Int, 31, (1987)
  • [4] Dzau, Colucci, Hollenberg, Et al., Relation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system to clinical state of congestive heart failure, Circulation, 63, pp. 645-651, (1981)
  • [5] Francis, Neurohumoral mechanisms involved in congestive heart failure, The American Journal of Cardiology, 55, pp. 15A-21A, (1985)
  • [6] Svanegaard, Johansen, Thayssen, Et al., Neurohormonal systems during progression of heart failure: A review, Cardiology, 83, pp. 21-29, (1993)
  • [7] Feldman, Modulation of adrenergic receptors and G-transduction proteins in failing human ventricular myocardium, Circulation, 87, pp. IV27-IV34, (1993)
  • [8] Clavell, Stingo, Margulies, Et al., Physiological significance of endothelin: Its role in congestive heart failure, Circulation, 87, pp. V45-V50, (1993)
  • [9] Porter, Eckberg, Fritsch, Et al., Autonomic pathophysiology in heart failure patients, J Clin Invest, 85, pp. 1362-1371, (1990)
  • [10] Rowell, Adjustments to upright posture and blood loss, Human Circulation. Regulation During Physical Stress, pp. 137-173, (1986)