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      Increased cardiac sympathetic nerve activity in ovine heart failure is reduced by lesion of the area postrema, but not lamina terminalis

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          Adverse consequences of high sympathetic nervous activity in the failing human heart.

          In view of previous experimental evidence relating sympathetic nervous overactivity in the heart to myocardial necrosis and ventricular arrhythmias, we prospectively examined the hypothesis that heightened cardiac sympathetic nervous activity is associated with an adverse outcome in patients with moderate to severe heart failure. Despite recent therapeutic advances, patients with heart failure continue to have high mortality from progressive hemodynamic decompensation and lethal ventricular arrhythmias. It is believed that initially compensatory increases in sympathetic nervous system activity may ultimately be maladaptive, potentially contributing to subsequent adverse events. Sixty patients with moderate to severe heart failure (left ventricular ejection fraction 18.9 +/- 0.9% [mean +/- SE]) were studied prospectively. In addition to the compilation of a hemodynamic, biochemical and electrocardiographic profile for each patient, whole-body and cardiac sympathetic activity were determined by isotope dilution. The relation of these variables to outcome was determined by Cox proportional hazards analysis. The mean follow-up period of the study group was 7 +/- 1 months (range 1 to 24) with a 12-month actuarial survival of 75%. Deaths (14 in all) were accounted for either by sudden death or progressive heart failure in equal numbers. The rate of release of norepinephrine from the heart was significantly higher in patients with heart failure than in healthy subjects (402 +/- 37 vs. 105 +/- 19 pmol/min, p < 0.01), although the values for heart failure ranged widely from normal to 10 times normal. By univariate Cox proportional hazards analysis, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (p < 0.01), mean pulmonary artery pressure (p < 0.001), serum sodium levels (p < 0.01) and cardiac norepinephrine spill-over rate (p < 0.001) were identified as significant prognostic markers. In a multivariate analysis, cardiac norepinephrine spillover rate was identified as the most powerful prognostic marker (p = 0.0006) of those evaluated in this study. These results suggest that activation of the sympathetic nervous system in patients with heart failure, specifically the cardiac sympathetic nerves, may contribute to the poor prognosis associated with severe heart failure. The data therefore provide a rationale for the use of drugs such as beta-adrenergic blocking agents in the management of patients with heart failure.
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            Norepinephrine spillover to plasma in patients with congestive heart failure: evidence of increased overall and cardiorenal sympathetic nervous activity.

            The analysis of plasma kinetics of the sympathetic neurotransmitter norepinephrine can be used to estimate sympathetic nervous "activity" (integrated nerve firing rate) for the body as a whole and for individual organs. In 12 patients with cardiac failure (left ventricular ejection fraction 10% to 39%), the mean arterial plasma norepinephrine concentration was 557 +/- 68 pg/ml (mean +/- SE) compared with 211 +/- 21 pg/ml in 15 subjects without heart failure (p less than .002). The difference was due to both increased release of norepinephrine to plasma (indicating increased "total" sympathetic activity) and reduced clearance of norepinephrine from plasma. The increase in sympathetic activity did not involve all organs equally. Cardiac (32 +/- 9 vs 5 +/- 1 ng/min; p less than .002) and renal (202 +/- 45 vs 66 +/- 9 ng/min; p = .002) norepinephrine spillover were increased by 540% and 206%, respectively, but norepinephrine spillover from the lungs was normal. Adrenomedullary activity was also increased in the patients with heart failure, whose mean arterial plasma epinephrine concentration was 181 +/- 38 pg/ml compared with 71 +/- 12 pg/ml in control subjects (p less than .02). There is marked regional variation, inapparent from measurements of plasma norepinephrine concentration, in sympathetic nerve activity in patients with congestive heart failure. The finding of increased cardiorenal norepinephrine spillover has important pathophysiologic and therapeutic implications.
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              The area postrema: a brain monitor and integrator of systemic autonomic state.

              The area postrema is a medullary structure lying at the base of the fourth ventricle. The area postrema's privileged location outside of the blood-brain barrier make this sensory circumventricular organ a vital player in the control of autonomic functions by the central nervous system. By virtue of its lack of tight junctions between endothelial cells in this densely vascularized structure and the presence of fenestrated capillaries, peptide and other physiological signals borne in the blood have direct access to neurons that project to brain areas with important roles in the autonomic control of many physiological systems, including the cardiovascular system and systems controlling feeding and metabolism. However, the area postrema is not simply a conduit through which signals flow into the brain, but it is now being recognized as the initial site of integration for these signals as they enter the circuitry of the central nervous system.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Basic Research in Cardiology
                Basic Res Cardiol
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0300-8428
                1435-1803
                September 2018
                August 3 2018
                September 2018
                : 113
                : 5
                Article
                10.1007/s00395-018-0695-9
                30076468
                1bddc7f7-18b0-4826-866c-ec45aef333af
                © 2018

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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