Oral clonidine progressively decreased blood pressure and muscle sympathetic nerve activity, subtly reduced cold pressor sympathoexcitation, but maintained baroreceptor reflex gain.
RCT (n=9)
Does oral clonidine alter sympathetic activity and baroreflex responses in healthy normotensive men?
Oral clonidine reduces resting blood pressure and sympathetic nerve activity without impairing baroreflex sensitivity in healthy men.
Clonidine, an alpha 2-adrenergic agonist, has been shown to modify the hemodynamic responses to surgery. To examine further the mechanism underlying this action, we evaluated the neurocirculatory effects of oral clonidine and the ability of clonidine to alter the hemodynamic and sympathetic responses to a noxious stimulus (cold pressor test) and to baroreceptor perturbations in nine healthy men (ages 20-29 yr). Heart rate (ECG), blood pressure (radial artery catheter), central venous pressure (jugular vein), and cardiac output (impedance cardiography) were monitored before and after oral clonidine (0.3 mg) or placebo. Plasma norepinephrine was measured with high-performance liquid chromatography. Sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) to skeletal muscle blood vessels was recorded from a Tungsten needle positioned within the peroneal nerve. Baroreceptor testing was carried out by intravenous bolus injections of nitroprusside (100 micrograms) followed 60 s later by intravenous phenylephrine (150 micrograms). The slope of the linear relationship between the change in R-R interval versus the change in mean pressure (cardiac baroslope) or change in SNA versus change in diastolic pressure (sympathetic baroslope) was determined at baseline and 75 min after clonidine or placebo. In addition, peak responses to the cold pressor test (60-s hand immersion in ice water) were determined at the same intervals. Clonidine progressively decreased blood pressure and muscle SNA over the 75-min session. Clonidine subtly reduced the sympathoexcitation produced by the cold pressor test but did not alter the gain of the baroreceptor reflex regulating cardiac interval or peripheral SNA; baroslope relationships were simply shifted leftward (to operate at lower pressures).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Muzi et al. (Sun,) は健康な正常血圧の人間 (n=9) を対象にRCTを実施しました。クロニジンとプラセボの比較が、冷圧試験およびバロレセプターの攪乱に対する血行動態および交感神経反応に関して評価されました。経口クロニジンは血圧および筋肉の交感神経活動を徐々に低下させ、冷圧による交感神経亢進をわずかに減少させましたが、バロレセプター反射のゲインは維持されました。
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