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      Dietary Nitrate Reduces Blood Pressure in Rats With Angiotensin II–Induced Hypertension via Mechanisms That Involve Reduction of Sympathetic Hyperactivity

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          Strategies to increase nitric oxide signalling in cardiovascular disease.

          Nitric oxide (NO) is a key signalling molecule in the cardiovascular, immune and central nervous systems, and crucial steps in the regulation of NO bioavailability in health and disease are well characterized. Although early approaches to therapeutically modulate NO bioavailability failed in clinical trials, an enhanced understanding of fundamental subcellular signalling has enabled a range of novel therapeutic approaches to be identified. These include the identification of: new pathways for enhancing NO synthase activity; ways to amplify the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway; novel classes of NO-donating drugs; drugs that limit NO metabolism through effects on reactive oxygen species; and ways to modulate downstream phosphodiesterases and soluble guanylyl cyclases. In this Review, we discuss these latest developments, with a focus on cardiovascular disease.
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            The sympathetic nervous system alterations in human hypertension.

            Several articles have dealt with the importance and mechanisms of the sympathetic nervous system alterations in experimental animal models of hypertension. This review addresses the role of the sympathetic nervous system in the pathophysiology and therapy of human hypertension. We first discuss the strengths and limitations of various techniques for assessing the sympathetic nervous system in humans, with a focus on heart rate, plasma norepinephrine, microneurographic recording of sympathetic nerve traffic, and measurements of radiolabeled norepinephrine spillover. We then examine the evidence supporting the importance of neuroadrenergic factors as promoters and amplifiers of human hypertension. We expand on the role of the sympathetic nervous system in 2 increasingly common forms of secondary hypertension, namely hypertension associated with obesity and with renal disease. With this background, we examine interventions of sympathetic deactivation as a mode of antihypertensive treatment. Particular emphasis is given to the background and results of recent therapeutic approaches based on carotid baroreceptor stimulation and radiofrequency ablation of the renal nerves.
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              Effects of dietary nitrate on blood pressure in healthy volunteers.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Hypertension
                Hypertension
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                0194-911X
                1524-4563
                April 2019
                April 2019
                : 73
                : 4
                : 839-848
                Affiliations
                [1 ]From the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden (D.D.G., J.C.C., Z.Z., A.E.G.P., E.W., J.O.L., M.C.)
                [2 ]Biotechnology Center (D.D.G., J.C.C., A.C.-G., C.M.B., V.A.B.), Federal University of Paraiba, Joao Pessoa, Brazil
                [3 ]Department of Physiological Sciences, Federal University of Goias, Goiania, Brazil (S.M.M., L.M.N., G.R.P.)
                [4 ]Department of Medical Cell Biology, Uppsala University, Sweden (A.E.G.P.).
                [5 ]Health Sciences Center (C.M.B.), Federal University of Paraiba, Joao Pessoa, Brazil
                Article
                10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.118.12425
                30712424
                f5d0288b-729d-41a5-b193-4cb4a834c0fb
                © 2019
                History

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