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Effects of prazosin on autonomic control of circulation in essential hypertension.
Author(s) -
Giuseppe Mancia,
Alberto Ferrari,
L Gregorini,
Mario Ferrari,
C. Bianchini,
L. Terzoli,
Gastone Leonetti,
Alberto Zanchetti
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
hypertension
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.986
H-Index - 265
eISSN - 1524-4563
pISSN - 0194-911X
DOI - 10.1161/01.hyp.2.5.700
Subject(s) - prazosin , baroreceptor , baroreflex , medicine , blood pressure , cardiac output , circulatory system , heart rate , vascular resistance , vasodilation , sympathetic nervous system , cardiology , anesthesia , antagonist , receptor
Prazosin, an antihypertensive agent that reduces blood pressure (BP) mainly through a blockade of alpha-adrenergic receptors, may, in theory, affect sympathetic control of circulation to an extent that impairs circulatory hemeostasis. This possibility was studied in subjects with essential hypertension by examining the cardiovascular effects of several stimuli that induce a powerful and diversified activation of the sympathetic noradrenergic activity (dynamic and isometric exercise, cold exposure) and of stimuli that exert a powerful inhibitory influence upon the sympathetic nervous system (carotid baroreceptor reflex). Before and after 15 days of continuous administration of prazosin (2-5 mg), 3 times a day, measurements were made of BP (intraarterial catheter), heart rate, cardiac output (thermodilution), and peripheral resistance. Prazosin reduced mean arterial pressure (10%) and peripheral resistance (9%) at rest, and it did not affect heart rate and cardiac output. Neurally mediated changes in arterial pressure, cardiac output, and peripheral resistance during dynamic or isometric exercise and cold exposure were unaffected by the drug; also unaffected were the cardiovascular responses to increase and decrease in carotid baroreceptor activity obtained by varying carotid transmural pressure through a variable neck pressure chamber device. Thus, the hypotensive and vasodilating effect of prazosin in essential hypertension is not accompanied by an impaired response to neural excitation influences upon the cardiovascular system. Also, the inhibitory influences originating from the carotid baroreflex are unchanged. These data indicate that circulatory homeostasis is largely preserved during administration of prazosin at clinically effective doses.

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