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1 Danish Aerospace Medical Centre of Research and Clinic of Aviation Medicine, Rigshospitalet; DK-2200 Copenhagen; 2 Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, DK-5000 Odense; and 3 Department of Internal Medicine and Endocrinology, Herlev Hospital, DK-2730 Herlev, Denmark
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ABSTRACT |
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Plasma vasoactive hormone
concentrations [epinephrine (pEpi), norepinephrine
(pNE), ANG II (pANG II), vasopressin
(pVP), endothelin-1 (pET-1)] and plasma renin
activity (pRA) were measured periodically and
compared during lower body negative pressure (LBNP) to test the
hypothesis that responsiveness of the renin-angiotensin system,
the latter being one of the most powerful vasoconstrictors in the body,
is of major importance for LBNP tolerance. Healthy men on a
controlled diet (2,822 cal/day, 2 mmol · kg
1
· day
1 Na+) were exposed to 30 min of LBNP
from
15 to
50 mmHg. LBNP was uneventful for seven men [25 ± 2 yr, high-tolerance (HiTol) group], but eight men (26 ± 3 yr)
reached presyncope after 11 ± 1 min [P < 0.001, low-tolerance (LoTol) group]. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) did not
change measurably, but central venous pressure and left atrial diameter
decreased similarly in both groups (5-6 mmHg, by
30%,
P < 0.05). Control (0 mmHg LBNP) hormone
concentrations were similar between groups, however, pRA
differed between them (LoTol 0.6 ± 0.1, HiTol 1.2 ± 0.1 ng
ANG I · ml
1 · h
1,
P < 0.05). LBNP increased (P < 0.05)
pRA and pANG II, respectively, more in the
HiTol group (9.9 ± 2.2 ng ANG I · ml
1
· h
1 and 58 ± 12 pg/ml) than in LoTol
subjects (4.3 ± 0.9 ng ANG I · ml
1 · h
1 and 28 ± 6 pg/ml). In contrast, the increase in
pVP was higher (P < 0.05) in the LoTol
than in the HiTol group. The increases (P < 0.05) for
pNE were nonsignificant between groups, and
pET-1 remained unchanged. Thus there may be a causal
relationship between attenuated activation of pRA and
pANG II and presyncope, with pVP being a
possible cofactor. Measurement of resting pRA may be of
predictive value for those with lower hypotensive tolerance.
hypotensive tolerance; vasopressin; central venous pressure; catecholamines
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE MECHANISM FOR REDUCTION of cerebral blood pressure resulting in syncope (fainting) in humans is not clear. Multiple interactive factors such as hypovolemia (11), altered baroreceptor function (17, 23), attenuated sympathetic vascular resistance (16), and the action of vasoactive hormones (7, 9, 11, 12, 17, 18, 21) are probably involved in this mechanism. Although the effect of various interactive catecholamine and cardiovascular responses on hypotension have been investigated intensively (24), relatively few investigators have studied the hypotensive association of the noncatecholamine vasoactive hormonal responses, e.g., the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (RAA) axis in the kidney and the vasopressin system in the brain (7-9, 11, 12, 18, 21). ANG II is one of the most powerful vasoconstrictors in the body, and its attenuated action might inhibit vasoconstriction during extreme hypotensive stress, such as lower body negative pressure (LBNP), where the usual muscular pressure on the caudal veins is absent. Oparil et al. (19) reported that in the 5 of 20 normotensive men and women who exhibited vasovagal syncope after 80° head-up tilt, the increase in plasma renin activity (pRA) was smaller in magnitude and duration than in the other subjects. On the other hand, Harrison et al. (9) found that 7 of 13 subjects who exhibited tilt intolerance had consistently lower systolic and pulse pressures (PP) and significantly higher pRA.
However, these vasoactive hormones do not act independently but appear to have significant interaction. On the basis of serial blood samples taken during progressive hypotension at 55 mmHg LBNP, it has been reported that the vasoactive hormone response starts with the catecholamines, progresses to the RAA system, and ends with the vasopressin axis (21), a sequence that also occurred during 70° head-up tilting in both men and women (6).
Thus the purpose for this study was to determine whether the neuroendocrine activation would differ in higher and lower tolerance subjects and to test the hypothesis that the RAA system is the more important for differentiating men with lower hypotensive tolerances.
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METHODS |
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Fifteen healthy, nonsmoking, male volunteers were selected as test subjects after passing a medical examination and giving informed consent. After LBNP testing was completed, they were allocated into two groups: those who tolerated 20 min of 50 mmHg LBNP [HiTol, n = 7, 25 ± 2 yr (SD), 184 ± 11 cm height, 78.2 ± 15.1 kg weight, and 2.01 ± 0.24 m2 surface area] and those who did not (LoTol, n = 8, 26 ± 3 yr, 185 ± 6 cm height, 81.8 ± 8.7 kg weight, and 2.05 ± 0.12 m2 surface area). This study was approved by the Regional Scientific Ethics Committee of Copenhagen and Frederiksberg (KF 01-299/96) and performed according to the Declaration of Helsinki.
All subjects consumed a controlled daily diet for 3 days before testing
that consisted of normal food (bread, meat, fruit, vegetables, milk,
etc.) containing 2,822 kcal/day (16% protein, 55% carbohydrate, 29%
fat). Dietary NaCl content was 2 mmol · kg
1 · day
1, i.e., 156 ± 29 (SD) mmol Na+/day (HiTol) and 161 ± 15 mmol
Na+/day (LoTol). Mean (±SE) respective urinary excretion
rates in the HiTol and LoTol groups were 1.8 ± 0.4 and 1.7 ± 0.4 ml · min
1 · day
1 [not
significant (NS)], and urinary Na+ excretions were
135 ± 24 and 135 ± 14 mmol/day (8.6 ± 1.2 and 8.0 ± 0.8 g Na+/day, NS).
The men slept in the laboratory the night before testing and consumed
no food or fluid after 2100 from the previous day to experiment
termination. They were awakened at 0745, urinated to close their 24-h
sample, were weighed, and then entered the LBNP chamber supine onto a
narrow padded saddle without foot support to start the experiment at
0800 when the central venous pressure (CVP) catheter was inserted and
electrocardiogram electrodes applied. The protocol for the 165-min
ambient control period was 60 min rest supine with the last 15 min for
plasma volume (PV) measurement, then 60 min sitting (last 15 min for
PV) and a final 45 min supine to determine that PV increases from
sitting to supine (Fig. 1). Changing body
position required ~2 min. This 165-min ambient period was followed by
the LBNP period (supine): 10 min at ambient pressure, 10 min at
15
mmHg, 20 min at
50 mmHg or until onset of presyncopal signs or
symptoms (point of intolerance), and finally 10 min of recovery at
ambient pressure. Presyncopal signs and symptoms included stomach
awareness, nausea, sweating, narrowing of vision, or dizziness or, if
those did not occur, a rapid drop in mean arterial pressure and/or
bradycardia. Time (min) on the figures indicated the start of the 3-min
interval when blood sampling commenced. The final
50-mmHg blood
sample was taken as close as possible to the onset of presyncopal signs
or symptoms. Mean (±SE) ambient dry-bulb temperature was 25.6 ± 1.3°C, and relative humidity was 38 ± 4%.
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The integrated heart rate was displayed on a Diascope monitor (model DS
521, Simonsen and Weel, Copenhagen, Denmark) and was counted manually
from a three-lead electrocardiogram. Arm cuff blood pressures were
displayed on a Protocol Systems monitor (model Propaq 102, Beaverton,
OR), but PP and MAP {1/3 [systolic blood pressure (SBP)
diastolic blood pressure (DPB)] + DBP} pressures were calculated
manually from a Finapres Monitor trace (model Ohmeda 2300, Englewood,
CO) with the sensor positioned on the mid- and distal phalanx of the
right middle or third finger. A CVP catheter assembly (16 gauge, 1.7 mm
ID with a 14-gauge injection catheter, model Cavafix Certo, B. Braun,
Melsungen, Germany) was inserted via a right antecubital vein. Another
catheter (18 gauge, model Venflon 2, BOC Ohmeda AB,
Helsingborg, Sweden) was inserted into a left forearm vein for
injection of Evans blue dye (Pharmacie Hopital E. Herriot, Lyon,
France). Heart rate, systemic (Propac) blood pressures, and CVP data
were displayed and recorded continuously on a Gould (model V1000,
Ballainvilliers, France) oscilloscope and model ES1000 strip-chart
recorder, respectively. Heart images were displayed on an
echocardiograph (model SSD-500, Aloka, Tokyo, Japan), recorded on a
Sony (model SVO 9500 MPD) videocassette recorder, and printed for
analysis later.
The CVP catheter was advanced to an intrathoracic vein near the superior vena cava, where its position was verified by the characteristic waveform and responses to respiratory maneuvers. The subject's arms were supported horizontally at heart level, and the electronically integrated pressure trace was calibrated frequently. Pressure calibration levels were determined manually with a water column.
Mean end-expiratory left atrial diameter (LAD) measurements, obtained at 3-min intervals during the LBNP period from 3 M-mode prints, were taken by echocardiography from the parasternal long-axis view. The LAD were measured blind (3).
The two PV determinations required 10 3-ml blood samples (30 ml) and four 2-ml samples (8 ml) for hematocrit (Hct) plus a maximum of 14 20-ml samples (280 ml) for pRA and for plasma vasoactive hormone concentrations [epinephrine (pEpi), norepinephrine (pNE), ANG II (pANG II), and vasopressin (pVP)] analyses (at 3-min intervals) and five 5-ml samples for plasma vasoactive hormone concentration of endothelin-1 (pET-1, 25 ml at 10-min intervals) during the LBNP period depending on the onset of presyncopal signs or symptoms (when the experiment was terminated; Fig. 1). Maximal blood volume withdrawn was 343 ml/experiment; of that, the discarded presample dead-space volume was 42 ml, whereas that from the Evans blue test was reinjected.
The blood was transferred to chilled polyethylene tubes containing
appropriate anticoagulants and buffers. For pEpi and
pNE, the tubes contained 20 µl/ml of blood with 0.195 M
reduced glutathione and 0.250 M EGTA adjusted with NaOH to pH
range 6-7. For pVP, pANG II, and
pET-1, the tubes contained 25 µl EDTA and 2,700 KIU of
Trasylol R, i.e., aprotinin (Novo Nordisk, Bagsvaerd, Denmark). The
tubes were oscillated gently, iced, centrifuged at 1,500 g for 10 min at 4°C, and stored at
18°C for batch analysis.
Albumin space was determined after 45 min rest supine and sitting with
intravenous injection of Evans blue dye via the forearm catheter in
eight subjects (5 HiTol and 3 LoTol group). The central venous
catheter allowed for a 3-ml preinjection blood sample taken at
1 min
and postinjection samples at 5, 7, 10, and 15 min into tubes containing
12.5 IU heparin/ml. Plasma dye concentration was measured on each
sample at 620 and 740 nm (Hitachi, model U-1000 spectrophotometer)
before each injection of dye and also in the postinjection samples, so
extraction was unnecessary. Quadruplicate microhematocrit tubes were
centrifuged at 12,000 g for 5 min in a Struers Kebo model
3K10 centrifuge (Sigma Laborzentrifugen, Osterode am Harz, Germany) and
corrected with a plasma centrifugation trapping factor of 0.96 and
body-venous F-cell factor of 0.91. Plasma and blood volumes were
measured and calculated (4).
pVP was measured by radioimmunoassay (2) with plasma extracted by Sep-Pak C18 columns (Waters, Milford, MA) preconditioned sequentially with 5 ml each of 4% acetic acid in 96% ethanol, 100% methanol, water, and 4% acetic acid. Two milliliters of plasma acidified with 6 ml of 4% acetic acid were run through the columns that were then washed with 5 ml of water. The peptide was eluted with 3 ml of 4% acetic acid in 60% ethanol into Minisorp R tubes (Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) containing 10 µl (0.1%) of Triton X-100 (octyl phenoxy polyethoxyethanol, Sigma Aldrich Vallensbaek, Strand, Denmark). The air-dried eluate was adjusted to pH 7.4 with 750 µl of assay buffer, (0.1 M phosphate buffer with [0.01 M K2 EDTA, 0.01 M NaN3, and 1.0 mg/ml of serum albumin) (Behringwerke, Marburg, Germany). Then 300 µl each of test sample and standard were incubated for 24 h with 300 µl of antibody (AB3096). 125I vasopressin (New England Nuclear, Life Sciences Products, Boston, MA), containing 2,200 Ci/mmol (100 µl, 8,000 disintegrations/min), was added, and incubation was continued for an additional 24 h. Bound was separated from free antigen with 1,050 µl of a charcoal-plasma suspension (10.8 g charcoal, and 60 µl of plasma in 300 µl of buffer). After centrifugation, the supernate radioactivity was measured. The detection limit of the assay was 0.1-0.2 pg/ml. Mean recovery was 73% and the intra-assay coefficiant of variation (CV) was ± 6.5% at 2.0 pg/ml and 9.0% at 2.4 pg/ml.
pANG II was measured by radioimmunoassay (13) with plasma extracted by Sep-Pak C18 columns activated with 5 ml methanol followed by 5 ml water. Then, 2.2 ml of plasma containing a tracer amount of ANG II (for recovery determination) were added to the columns, which were washed with 5 ml water and 5 ml 20% methanol in water, and the ANG II was then eluated with 2 ml of methanol. The eluate, dried with N2 at 37°C, was dissolved in 1.5 ml of buffer (0.1 M Tris · HCl with 0.2% BSA and 10 mM Na2 EDTA). 125I-labeled ANG II and diluted antiserum were added to aliquots of the extracted plasma and incubated at 4°C for 18 h. Separation of bound from free antibody-radioiodinated ANG II was by charcoal absorption. The detection limit of the assay (1.4 pg) was estimated as the quantity of ANG II that displaced 10% of the binding of the radioiodinated label alone. Mean recovery of ANG II was 69 ± 7%, and intra-assay CV was ± 8%. Results were not corrected for incomplete recovery.
pET-1 was measured by radioimmunoassay (1, 22) with plasma extracted by Sep-Pak C18 columns (Waters Milford, MA) preconditioned sequentially with 5 ml each of 4% acetic acid in 96% ethanol, 100% methanol, water, and 4% acetic acid. Two milliliters of plasma, acidified with 6 ml of 4% acetic acid, were run through the columns that were then washed with 5 ml of water. The peptide was eluted with 3 ml of 4% acetic acid in 96% ethanol into minisorp R tubes (Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) containing 10 µl (0.1%) of Triton X-100. The air-dried eluate was adjusted to pH 7.4 with 550 µl of assay buffer (0.01 M phosphate buffer with 0.01 M K2EDTA and 0.001 M NaN3 and 1.0 mg/ml of human serum albumin) (Behringwerke, Marburg, Germany). Then 200 µl each of test sample and standard were incubated for 24 h with 100 µl of antibody RAS6901 (Peninsula Laboratories Europe, St. Helens, UK). Then, 50 µl (6,000 disintegrations/min) of I125-labeled ET-1 (New England Nuclear Life Sciences Products, Boston, MA) were added, and incubation was continued for an additional 24 h. Bound was separated from free antigen with 1,050 µl of a charcoal-plasma suspension (10.8 g charcoal and 60 µl of plasma in 300 µl of buffer). After centrifugation, the supernatant radioactivity was measured. The detection limit of the assay was <0.6 pg/tube, and the extraction recovery of unlabeled ET-1 was 100% from plasma. Interassay CV was 10% at an ET-1 concentration of 6 pg/ml.
pE and pNE were measured with a radioenzymatic assay (14). Plasma was precipitated with an equal volume of perchloric acid, and 100 µl of the supernatant were incubated with the enzyme carboxy-O-methyl-transferase. After incubation, unlabeled metanephrine and normetanephrine were added to the supernatant, and samples were extracted with an isoamylalcohol-toluene mixture. These extracted samples were acidified with HCl, and 120 µl were injected into an HPLC (Waters model 600) where a 120 × 3 mm Nucleosil C18 reverse-phase column separated the metanephrine and normetanephrine. The mobile phase consisted of dilute phosphoric acid (30 mM, pH 1.8) with 2% methanol added before use. The cold metanephrines were measured at 276 nm (ultraviolet) to ensure that the labeled samples were collected at appropriate elution times (for example, at 2.6 min for normetanephrine and 4.0 min for metanephrine). The eluate was collected in 1.0-min fractions centered on those intervals. There was no crossover between the two peaks. Then, 3H-labeled metanephrine and normetanephrine were oxidized to vanillin and counted with liquid scintillation spectrometry. Intra-assay CV for normal, basal levels of epinephrine and norepinephrine were 8% and 6%, respectively; corresponding interassay CV were 11% and 7%, respectively. Intra-assay sensitivity (3 × standard deviation of the blank) was 0.3 pg/assay for epinephrine and 0.5 pg/assay for norepinephrine; corresponding inter-assay sensitivity was 0.5 pg/assay for both variables.
Statistical analyses. Anthropometric, environmental, dietary control, and LBNP tolerance data were analyzed with the t-statistic for independent groups (HP-65, Stat-Pac 1 no. 1-30A, Hewlett-Packard, Cupertino, CA). The difference between PV in the supine and sitting positions was determined with the paired t-test (HP-65, no. 1-29A). Remaining data from the two groups over time were analyzed first with one-way ANOVA (SPSS 7.5 for Windows, SPSS, 1996, Chicago, IL). Because of the inconsistent experiment termination times in the LoTol group, subsequent differences between groups were also determined with the Kruskal-Wallis H-test (15), a nonparametric analog of one-way ANOVA. All presyncopal data through 12 min were included in the analysis; data for the one subject at 15 min were omitted. Significant data indicated in the figures were significant by both ANOVA and the Kruskal-Wallis tests. An intercorrelation matrix (Pearson-product moment, SPSS 7.5 for Windows) was calculated with cardiovascular and hormonal variables. The null hypothesis was rejected when P < 0.05, and nonsignificant differences were denoted NS.
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RESULTS |
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LBNP tolerance.
All HiTol subjects completed 20 min of
50-mmHg pressure with no
adverse signs, symptoms, or discontinuities in their cardiovascular or
hormonal data (Figs. 2 and 3). The LoTol group's intolerance ranged
from 6 to 15 min (mean = 11 ± 1 min, t = 9.01, P < 0.001). Numbers of subjects at each
intolerance time at
50 mmHg were as follows: 6 min for all 8 subjects, 9 min for 7 subjects, 12 min for 6 subjects, and 15 min for 1 subject. The mean values at 18 min in the figures are their final
intolerance levels irrespective of time.
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Plasma and blood volumes. PV data from the two groups (n = 8) were not significantly different, so they were combined for analysis. Mean (±SE) PV in the sitting position (3,557 ± 126 ml, 42 ml/kg) was increased in the supine position to 3,911 ± 153 ml (10.0%, t = 5.01, P < 0.001); corresponding calculated blood volumes increased from 5,975 ± 229 ml (71 ml/kg) sitting to 6,403 ± 259 ml (7.2%, t = 4.18, P < 0.002) supine.
Cardiovascular responses.
After 60 min supine, there were no significant differences in heart
rate (range 52 ± 3 to 60 ± 4 beats/min) or in SBP (range 116 ± 3 to 127 ± 3 mmHg), DBP (range 72 ± 2 to
77 ± 2 mmHg), or PP (range 40 ± 3 to 50 ± 2 mmHg)
over time or between groups during the supine 10-min control period and
the ensuing 10 min of 15 mmHg LBNP (Table
1, Fig. 2).
Onset of
50 mmHg by minute 3 resulted in increases
(P < 0.05) in heart rate in both groups of 76 ± 5 to 97 ± 6 beats/min, no significant changes in SBP (121 to 116 mmHg) or DBP (76 to 79 mmHg), but PP decreased (P < 0.05) in both groups. From 9 to 12 min at
50 mmHg, there were no
significant changes in heart rate or in SBP, DBP, or PP in either
group. Essentially all SBP at
50 mmHg were decreased from their
respective mean control levels, whereas DBPs were not (Table 1).
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50 mmHg (Fig. 2). CVP was sensitive to
progressive negative pressure, but there was no significant difference
in CVP between groups during the entire experiment (Fig. 2). CVP,
unchanged (range 5.4-6.9 mmHg) during the control period,
decreased significantly to 3.3-3.9 mmHg at
15 mmHg and further
to 0.4-1.2 mmHg at
50 mmHg and had not increased to control
levels by 5 min of recovery. Like CVP, the LAD was also sensitive to
the progressive negative pressure (Fig. 2), but the LoTol group's LAD
were significantly greater than those for the HiTol group in the
control,
15 mmHg, and recovery periods, but not during
50 mmHg.
From the 9 min control level to 12 min at
50 mmHg, the LoTol group's
LAD decreased from 37 to 25 mm (by 32%, P < 0.05);
that in the HiTol group decreased similarly from 30 to 21 mm (by 30%,
P < 0.05), and both groups' LAD had recovered by 5 min.
Plasma enzyme-hormonal responses. There were no statistically significant differences in plasma endothelin-1, a potent vasoconstrictor, between groups or over time during control through recovery: mean (±SE) values ranged from 3.2 ± 0.4 to 4.1 ± 0.3 pg/ml.
With the exception of similar control levels of pANG II in both groups and its significant increase in the HiTol group during
15
mmHg, the responses of pRA and pANG II were
remarkably similar during
50 mmHg and recovery (Fig.
3). The HiTol
group's increases in pRA and pANG II from
control 9 min to
50 mmHg at 18 min (intolerance level) were ~8.0-
and 7.7-fold, respectively, whereas those for LoTol were ~6.9- and
6.1-fold, respectively. Mean LoTol group tolerance (11 ± 1 min)
was reached at lower (P < 0.05) levels of
pRA and pANG II in the control and all
subsequent periods. Higher tolerance individuals could be characterized
by their higher (P < 0.05) resting levels of
pRA.
pVP was not significantly different between groups or over
time in the control periods (range 0.4 ± 0.1 to 0.7 ± 0.3 pg/ml) or between groups during
15 mmHg (Fig. 2). But the important differences between groups and over time occurred during
50 mmHg, where pVP increased more slowly but significantly in the
HiTol group from 1.0 ± 0.3 (at 9 min
15 mmHg) to reach
13.0 ± 4.8 pg/ml [change (
) = 12.0 pg/ml,
P < 0.05] at 18 min, but it increased more quickly
and significantly in the LoTol group from 0.9 ± 0.2 to 54.7 ± 18.3 pg/ml (
= 53.8 pg/ml, P < 0.05) at 18 min (mean intolerance). Vasopressin in the LoTol group at 12 min and
50 mmHg was probably higher than that in the HiTol group because of
impending onset of presyncopal signs and symptoms. One LoTol group subject's pVP even reached 168.8 pg/ml at
intolerance at 9 min and
50 mmHg. Thus compared with HiTol,
accentuated pVP responses were found in the LoTol group in
contrast to the attenuated responses of pRA and pANG
II.
pEpi was not significantly different between groups in the
control,
15 and
50 mmHg, or recovery periods (Table
2). However, from control, it was
significantly increased over time only at
50 mmHg in HiTol and at
15 and
50 mmHg in the LoTol group. On the other hand, the
pNE concentration was more sensitive, whereas the mean
values of the two groups were similiar in all periods, it increased
significantly above control levels in both groups during
15 and
50
mmHg and did not recover until 10 min in the LoTol group (Fig. 3). The
pNE response pattern during
50 mmHg and recovery was
similar to that of pVP; although the pNE
maximum response in the LoTol group occurred at 9 min and
50 mmHg,
its maximal pVP response occurred at intolerance.
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15 mmHg, where there was
significantly increased activity even when heart rate and various blood
pressures were unchanged. When these combined hormonal responses from
all subjects at 3, 6, and 9 min during
15 mmHg were expressed as
respective percent changes in those intervals, there does not seem to
be a general sequence of onset beginning with catecholamines and progressing to the RAA system and on to pVP
(18). In fact, the pVP concentrations had the
greater ranges and variability (±SD) of percent changes when compared
with the other hormonal responses. When these data were ranked
according to the upper end of their respective ranges (±SD), we
observed a different order beginning with pVP and ending
with pRA: pVP (
10.4 ± 19.0 to
102.9 ± 105.8), pEpi (
12.3 ± 27.2 to
42.7 ± 66.3), pNE (
2.4 ± 16.6 to 37.2 ± 32.6), pANG II (0.0 ± 17.4 to 24.2 ± 47.2), and
pRA (0.2 ± 19.3 to 13.4 ± 25.7%).
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DISCUSSION |
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Our protocol was designed to prolong the presyncopal period to better delineate vasoactive enzyme-hormonal activation by using an initial negative pressure of only 15 mmHg for 10 min and progressing to 50 mmHg for 20 min or until onset of presyncopal responses. This protocol was sufficient to allocate otherwise unresponsive men with "normal" tolerance into approximately equal higher and lower tolerance groups where there appears to be a wide range of normal LBNP tolerance from 16 min to more than 30 min. None of the subjects was aware of any abnormal syncopal responses in their daily lives.
It is clear that significant hormonal activation occurred in both
groups at
15 mmHg when heart rate, PP, and MAP were unresponsive. Our
data indicated the onset sequence was
pVP
pEpi
pNE
(pRA
pANG
II) in the LoTol group and essentially the same in the
HiTol group [pVP
pNE
pEpi
(
pRA
pANG II)], with the RAA system at
the terminal end in both. The activation patterns of pRA
and pANG II were also similar in both tolerance
groups at
50 mmHg (with due regard for the large difference in their
y-axis scales in Fig. 3), i.e., they increased
progressively during both lower and especially the higher levels of LBNP.
This RAA system response was probably not due to large variations in plasma cations, because the subjects were consuming the same sodium intake per kilogram of body weight coupled with similar urinary Na+ excretions before the experiment. Also, plasma cation and osmotic concentrations remain within normal control limits during the hypotensive hypovolemia that occurs during 70° head-up tilt (6). Controlled sodium intake is important because it controls the extracellular fluid volume and renal sodium excretion (including distal tubular delivery) and because of its close interaction with control of blood pressure; e.g., exaggerated symptoms of hypotension are attenuated in orthostatically intolerant patients on a high-sodium diet (20).
pRA in the LoTol group was significantly lower than that in
the HiTol group in the control period and throughout LBNP. Jacob et al.
(11) suggested that reduced pRA, possibly from
defective sympathetic activation of the kidney, could have facilitated
fainting in chronically orthostatically intolerant patients via
hypovolemia. They found a significant correlation (r = +0.84) between pRA and blood volume. It is well known that
total body dehydration and hypovolemia reduce tilt tolerance
(8) and accentuate pVP, pRA, and
plasma aldosterone responses during tilt (7). But resting control PVs from five high- and three low-tolerance men in the present
study were not significantly different, and their plasma and blood
volumes increased similarly when they moved from sitting to the supine
position. However, the differences in LAD between the two groups
suggest a change in volume in the central venous system. The similar
decrease in CVP in both groups and different LADs imply low compliance
in the low-pressure system. Even though the LoTol group had the usual
increased catecholamine activity and pVP release during
50 mmHg, the discrepancy between increases in pANG II and
pVP in the two groups during LBNP is clear: when compared
with HiTol group responses, the increase in pANG II in the
LoTol group was attenuated, whereas the increases in pNE
and pVP were accentuated, suggesting no defect in the
sympathetic nervous response. As a result, the LoTol group was
unable to maintain MAP, leading to impending syncope.
The significant activation of norepinephrine in both groups during
15
mmHg LBNP was probably a result of the decreased CVP. This activation
also reflects an increase in renal sympathetic nervous activity (RSNA),
which released renin significantly in both groups at the end of
15
mmHg LBNP, but increased ANG II significantly only in the HiTol group
at that point. Thus from the similar decrease in CVP, greater
intolerance may be associated with the ability to increase RSNA and
hence renin angiotensin in the kidney. Hence, differential intolerance
may be determined by ability to increase RSNA.
Although pVP was activated somewhat during
15 mmHg LBNP,
its massive release, which occured only during impending syncope at the
end of the presyncopal cascade, is well documented (5, 9, 10). The vasopressin system has tremendous
reserve capacity in that pVP concentrations in excess of
500 pg/ml (normal 1.5 pg/ml) have been measured at syncope (J. E. Greenleaf, personal observation). So it seems more likely that the
large vasopressin release is a consequence and not a causal factor of
impending syncope and nausea. Jardine et al. (12)
also observed significant increases in pVP and the plasma
hormone concentration of ACTH after 5 min of 60° head-up tilt in
patients with a history suggestive of vasovagal reactions. It is
unclear whether this large pVP response was induced by a
sinoaortic baroreceptor response or vice versa. The similar significant
rise in pNE in both groups might be an early stimulus that
signals the possible impending vasopressor reaction. Thus increased
sympathetic activity rather than the attenuated response to secrete
more ANG II may have been a major initiating stimulus that resulted in
the hypotensive intolerance. If the LoTol group was more predisposed to
the vasopressor syncope by the increased sympathetic activity that
resulted in a strong vagal stimulus, this stimulus could have inhibited
RAA system activity. This explanation implies that the mechanism of the
intolerance was a graded response in subjects of varying intolerance
thresholds and should function similarly in all subjects at their
varying presyncopal points. The question arises if the depressed
pRA and/or pANG II in the LoTol group was
increased to equal that in the HiTol group, would the LoTol group's
tolerance be increased significantly? If so, it would confirm the
pivotal role of the RAA system in this hypotensive mechanism.
Our results confirm those of Mark et al. (17) who
first reported that
40 mmHg LBNP decreased CVP and arterial PP which attenuated, respectively, both low- and high-pressure baroreceptor inhibition, i.e., reactivated baroreceptor function. But their pRA increased significantly (to 7.4 ± 1.4 ng · ml
1 · h
1) only when both
low- and high-pressure inhibition occurred and not with low
pressure (
10- to
20 mmHg LBNP) inhibition alone. This pressure was
comparable with the
15 mmHg LBNP used in the present study, in which
pRA was also unchanged in both groups, whereas pANG
II was increased significantly in the HiTol group but was
unchanged (inhibited?) in the LoTol group due to presumably reactivated
low-pressure baroreceptors from the LBNP.
Norsk et al. (18) indicated that pVP during
LBNP responds more to narrowing of the PP than to reduction of CVP.
Results from the present study support this conclusion from the
significant correlation between PP and pVP
(r =
0.52, P < 0.01) in the HiTol group, but not in the LoTol group (r =
0.12, NS). We
found similar results in the RAA system only in our HiTol group between
PP vs. pRA and PP vs. pANG II: the r
were
0.55 and
0.56 (both P < 0.01), respectively.
However, the respective r in our LoTol group were
0.36 and
0.24 (both NS). These findings strengthen the high-pressure hypothesis regarding the hormonal release action on PP, but it may not
apply to lower-tolerance subjects.
It is concluded that the response of the renin-angiotensin system appears to be linked inversely to the occurrence of presyncopal symptoms, and measurements of resting pRA may have predictive value for those with lower hypotensive tolerance.
Perspectives
If sufficiently confirmed, one major practical application of these findings concerning attenuation of the increase in pRA and pANG II during hypotensive stress might be to provide a method for prognosticating lower orthostatic tolerance in normal, healthy people. An increase of hypotensive tolerance by infusing ANG II during LBNP would help to confirm this hypothesis.| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
|---|
The authors thank Maria Gefke, Mette Hammerum, Dorte Hansen, and Morten Schou for valuable technical assistance, Lotte Rosenkrands, Stephenie Cowell, and Heather Biagini for manuscript preparation, the test subjects for cheerful cooperation, and Loring Rowell for manuscript review.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
This work was funded by Danish Research Council Grants 9602455 and 9802910.
Present address of J. E. Greenleaf and S. R. Simonson: Laboratory for Human Environmental Physiology (221A-2), NASA, Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. E. Greenleaf, Gravitational Research Branch (221A-2), NASA, Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000 (E-mail: jgreenleaf{at}mail.arc.nasa.gov).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 22 November 1999; accepted in final form 22 March 2000.
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