Affiliation:
1. From the Hypertension Section, Cardiology Division, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX (A.K., W.V.); and the Heart Institute/Hypertension Center of Excellence, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA (A.K., R.G.V.).
Abstract
Cocaine-induced acute hypertension is mediated largely by increased central sympathetic nerve activity. We hypothesized that dexmedetomidine, a central sympatholytic, reverses cocaine-induced increases in sympathetic nerve activity, mean arterial pressure (MAP), and heart rate (HR) in cocaine-addicted subjects. First, we conducted a dose-finding study in 15 nontreatment-seeking cocaine-addicted subjects and 12 cocaine-naive healthy controls to find doses of intravenous dexmedetomidine that lower MAP and HR in the absence of acute-cocaine challenge. We then conducted a placebo-controlled treatment trial in 26 cocaine-addicted subjects to determine whether dexmedetomidine reverses MAP and HR increases after intranasal cocaine (3 mg/kg). Skin sympathetic nerve activity (measured in the second protocol) and skin vascular resistance (measured in both protocols) served as indices of cocaine-sensitive central sympathoexcitation. In doses up to 0.6 µg/kg IV, dexmedetomidine alone caused comparable dose-dependent decreases in blood pressure in cases and controls but a 1.0 µg/kg dose was required to lower HR. In cocaine-addicted subjects, low-dose dexmedetomidine (0.4 µg/kg; n=14) abolished cocaine-induced increases in skin sympathetic nerve activity (156±26 versus −15±22%, cocaine/placebo versus cocaine/dexmedetomidine;
P
<0.05), skin vascular resistance (+10±2 versus −2±3 U;
P
<0.05), and MAP (+6±1 versus −5±2 mm Hg;
P
<0.01) without affecting HR (+13±2 versus +9±2 bpm;
P
=ns). When dexmedetomidine was increased to 1 µg/kg (high dose; n=12) to reverse cocaine-induced increases in HR, MAP did not fall further and increased paradoxically in 4 of 12 subjects. Thus, in a low nonsedating dose, dexmedetomidine constitutes a putative new treatment for cocaine-induced acute hypertension but higher sedating doses can increase blood pressure unpredictably during acute-cocaine challenge and should be avoided.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
24 articles.
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