Vol. 94, Issue 4, 1455-1459, April 2003
Effects of nonspecific
-adrenergic stimulation and
blockade on blood coagulation in hypertension
Roland
von
Känel1,2,
Joel
E.
Dimsdale1,
Karen A.
Adler1,
Elaine
Dillon1,
Christy J.
Perez1, and
Paul J.
Mills1
1 Department of Psychiatry, University of
California, San Diego, California 92093; and
2 Institute for Behavioral Sciences, Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
A hypercoagulable state might
contribute to increased atherothrombotic risk in hypertension. The
sympathetic nervous system is hyperactive in hypertension, and it
regulates hemostatic function. We investigated the effect of
nonspecific
-adrenergic stimulation (isoproterenol) and blockade
(propranolol) on clotting diathesis in hypertension. Fifteen
hypertensive and 21 normotensive subjects underwent isoproterenol
infusion in two sequential, fixed-order doses of 20 and then 40 ng · kg
1 · min
1 for 15 min/dose. Thirteen subjects were double-blind
studied after receiving placebo or propranolol (100 mg/day) for 5 days each. In hypertensive subjects, isoproterenol elicited a dose-dependent increase in plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) antigen
[F(2,34) = 5.02; P = 0.032] and a decrease in D-dimer
[F(2,34) = 4.57; P = 0.040], whereas soluble tissue factor remained unchanged. Propranolol
completely abolished the increase in vWF elicited by isoproterenol
[F(1,12) = 10.25; P = 0.008] but had no significant effect on tissue factor and D-dimer. In
hypertension, vWF is readily released from endothelial cells by
-adrenergic stimulation, which might contribute to increased
cardiovascular risk. However,
-adrenergic stimulation alone may not
be sufficient to trigger fibrin formation in vivo.
cardiovascular disease; hemostasis; von Willebrand factor; sympathetic nervous system; isoproterenol