Captopril lowers blood pressure without increasing heart rate and plasma norepinephrine, which suggests that this drug may potentiate arterial baroreflexes. In eight subjects with untreated essential hypertension, blood pressure was monitored intraarterially and the effects of baroreceptor stimulation or deactivation were assessed by measuring (1) the slopes of the relations between increase or reduction in systolic pressure (intravenous phenylephrine or nitroglycerin) and the resulting lengthening or shortening in R-R interval, and (2) the increase or decrease in mean arterial pressure induced by increasing and decreasing carotid transmural pressure (neck chamber). The measurements were made before and after a hypotensive oral dose of captopril (50 mg). Before captopril, the slopes of the R-R interval changes with increase and reduction in systolic pressure were 8 and 4 ms/mm Hg, respectively. The slopes of the mean arterial pressure changes with increase and reduction in carotid transmural pressure were 0.51 and 0.40 mm Hg, respectively. After captopril, the responses to baroreceptor stimulation were unaltered but those to baroreceptor deactivation were augmented. The pressor and heart rate responses to hand-grip and cold exposure were unchanged by captopril. Administration of captopril is accompanied by a baroreflex potentiation which involves the lower portion of the stimulus-response curve of the reflex. This phenomenon (which may originate at the afferent baroreceptor fibers or centrally) may avoid a reduction in the tonic baroreflex influence during captopril-induced hypotension, thus contributing to the hemodynamic effects of the drug.

Mancia, G., Parati, G., Pomidossi, G., Grassi, G., Bertinieri, G., Buccino, N., et al. (1982). Modification of arterial baroreflexes by captopril in essential hypertension. THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 49(6), 1415-1419 [10.1016/0002-9149(82)90353-8].

Modification of arterial baroreflexes by captopril in essential hypertension

MANCIA, GIUSEPPE
Primo
;
PARATI, GIANFRANCO
Secondo
;
GRASSI, GUIDO;FERRARI, ALBERTO;
1982

Abstract

Captopril lowers blood pressure without increasing heart rate and plasma norepinephrine, which suggests that this drug may potentiate arterial baroreflexes. In eight subjects with untreated essential hypertension, blood pressure was monitored intraarterially and the effects of baroreceptor stimulation or deactivation were assessed by measuring (1) the slopes of the relations between increase or reduction in systolic pressure (intravenous phenylephrine or nitroglycerin) and the resulting lengthening or shortening in R-R interval, and (2) the increase or decrease in mean arterial pressure induced by increasing and decreasing carotid transmural pressure (neck chamber). The measurements were made before and after a hypotensive oral dose of captopril (50 mg). Before captopril, the slopes of the R-R interval changes with increase and reduction in systolic pressure were 8 and 4 ms/mm Hg, respectively. The slopes of the mean arterial pressure changes with increase and reduction in carotid transmural pressure were 0.51 and 0.40 mm Hg, respectively. After captopril, the responses to baroreceptor stimulation were unaltered but those to baroreceptor deactivation were augmented. The pressor and heart rate responses to hand-grip and cold exposure were unchanged by captopril. Administration of captopril is accompanied by a baroreflex potentiation which involves the lower portion of the stimulus-response curve of the reflex. This phenomenon (which may originate at the afferent baroreceptor fibers or centrally) may avoid a reduction in the tonic baroreflex influence during captopril-induced hypotension, thus contributing to the hemodynamic effects of the drug.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Adult; Angiotensin I; Blood Pressure; Captopril; Heart Rate; Humans; Hypertension; Middle Aged; Nitroglycerin; Phenylephrine; Pressoreceptors; Proline; Reflex
English
1982
49
6
1415
1419
none
Mancia, G., Parati, G., Pomidossi, G., Grassi, G., Bertinieri, G., Buccino, N., et al. (1982). Modification of arterial baroreflexes by captopril in essential hypertension. THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 49(6), 1415-1419 [10.1016/0002-9149(82)90353-8].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/170918
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