Pressor responses to hyperventilation in elderly subjects differentiate essential from secondary hypertension
Author:
Fontana Fiorella1, Bernardi Pasquale1, Pizzi Carmine1, Pich Emilio2
Affiliation:
1. 1Dipartimento di Medicina Interna, dell’Invecchiamento e delle Malattie Nefrologiche, Università di Bologna, Ospedale S. Orsola, 40138, Bologna, Italy 2. 2Discovery Medicine, GlaxoSmithKline, Medicine Research Center, 37135, Verona, Italy
Abstract
AbstractWe evaluated pressor responses to the hyperventilation test in elderly normotensive (n=43, mean age 82 ± 5 years) and elderly hypertensive subjects (n=45 with essential hypertension, mean age 82 ± 2 years, and n=49 with secondary hypertension, mean age 82 ± 3 years). Hyperventilation did not change blood pressure (BP) in normotensive and secondary hypertensive subjects, whereas it decreased BP in essential hypertensives. Hierarchical cluster analysis based on BP responses to hyperventilation disclosed three groups of subjects in each population: group 1 exhibited a reduction in BP (essential hypertensives: 76%), group 2 no change (normotensives: 70%, secondary hypertensives: 76%), and group 3 an increase (normotensives: 19%, essential hypertensives: 13%, secondary hypertensives: 14%). Ambulatory BP monitoring found significant differences in pressor daytime profiles of hypertensive patients according to pressor responses to hyperventilation showing wide fluctuations in group 1 and 3 patients. Interestingly, the peak ambulatory SBP values correlated to the pre-hyperventilation SBP values in group 1, and to the hyperventilation peak SBP values in group 3. In conclusion: 1) Aging decreases reactivity to respiratory alkalosis in elderly normotensives; 2) hyperventilation induces significant pressor changes frequently in essential hypertension, but rarely in secondary hypertension; 3) the significant pressor responses to hyperventilation reflect the daytime pressor profiles predicting the highest daily fluctuations of BP values.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Reference22 articles.
1. Fontana F., Bernardi P., Merlo Pich E., Tartuferi L., Boschi S., Spampinato S., Opioid peptide modulation of circulatory response to hyperventilation in humans, Peptides, 2000, 21, 1223–1230 2. Fontana F., Bernardi P., Spampinato S., Di Toro R., Bugiardini R., β-endorphin modulation of pressor response to hyperventilation in hypertensive patients, Peptides, 2002, 23, 911–918 3. Fontana F., Bernardi P., Lanfranchi G., Pisati M.S., Merlo Pich E., Blood pressure response to hyperventilation test reflects daytime pressor profile. Hypertension, 2003, 41, 244–248 4. Rowe J.W., Troen B.R., Sympathetic nervous system and aging in man, Endocr. Rev., 1980, 1, 167–178 5. Rowlands D.B., Stallard T.J., Littler W.A., Comparison of ambulatory blood pressure and cardiovascular reflexes in elderly hypertensives, elderly normotensives and young hypertensives, J. Hypertens., 1983, 1,Suppl 2, 71–73
|
|