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How Stress Affects Blood Pressure
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
A new study investigates how the
body regulates blood pressure in response to daily stress.
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“Research
shows that two-thirds of patients’ high blood pressure is
not controlled despite the best efforts of their doctors.
That is terrible,” says Dr. Gregory Harshfield, director of
the Georgia Prevention Institute at the Medical College of
Georgia.
“We are trying to identify
the mechanisms through which blood pressure is regulated
under normal everyday conditions – which is what stress is –
and take that information back to the clinic to better
determine what sort of therapy is going to be most effective
at treating your blood pressure or your grandfather’s.”
More than a dozen
researchers have teamed up to do parallel studies in animal
models and young |
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adults to learn more about
what factors like genes, stress and obesity contribute,
their synergy and novel ways to control them. |
“This research will give us
information that allows us to identify what treatment is going to be
effective in what individual by genotype, by obesity and other
factors. What kind of treatment is going to be effective at keeping
an individual’s blood pressure down or maybe preventing it from ever
getting high,” says Dr. Harshfield, principal investigator on the
$10.6 million Program Project grant renewal from the National
Institutes of Health’s National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. 72
million Americans – 1 in 3 – are hypertensive, according to the
NHLBI.
Studies will explore fundamentals
such as why about 30 percent of young healthy blacks and 15 percent
of whites can’t effectively excrete sodium, a problem that raises
blood pressure by increasing the body’s fluid volume.
“We think there is a defect in
their kidneys, in the normal mechanisms that allow them to excrete
salt,” said Dr. David Pollock, renal physiologist at MCG’s Vascular
Biology Center and a program project leader. “When blood pressure
goes up due to stress, their kidneys ought to get rid of more salt
so their blood pressure will come down, and they don’t.”
Dr. Harshfield’s studies identified
this impaired stress-induced sodium natriuresis. He believes it’s
also a primary reason blood pressure remains elevated at night in
some blacks, rather than dipping as it should, which keeps stressing
the cardiovascular system.
Using a rat bred to be
salt-sensitive, the researchers are working to identify more about
the genetics of impaired sodium-handling.
“We have animal model data that
says the endothelin system normally functions to help your kidneys
get rid of salt,” says Dr. Pollock. His studies have shown the
kidney’s endothelin B receptor plays a critical role in promoting
excretion of acute and chronic salt loads by activating the
precursor to nitric oxide, a powerful dilator of blood vessels.
In the new studies, he’ll control
the rats’ diet and see whether stress slows down sodium excretion.
Preliminary evidence suggests it does. He’ll also give the rats an
endothelin antagonist, which blocks this hormone, and see if sodium
excretion improves. He’ll also see how a high-fat diet and obesity
alter the equation.
Meanwhile, for about a week, young
study participants with impaired sodium excretion will take a drug
to block the powerful blood vessel constrictor, angiotensin.
“From our point of view,
angiotensin promotes sodium retention directly and it also increases
aldosterone, another hormone which promotes sodium retention,” Dr.
Harshfield says. The researchers chose to study endothelin and
angiotensin because they believe they work together.
To explore the genetics, they’ll
also look at young adults with a different version of the
angiotensin receptor gene that they believe exacerbates
sodium-handling problems. MCG researchers identified this genetic
variation in people who retain sodium; blocking the receptor gene
will provide more evidence about the importance of angiotensin, says
Dr. Harshfield.
They’ll mimic the way many people
work – an hour of stress, a few minutes of relief, then back to
stress – by getting the young people to play competitive video
games, then measuring how gene blockers affect sodium excretion.
“Ultimately, you want to know how
to treat people with this variation,” Dr. Harshfield says. “There is
still a need to figure out why some people respond to some therapies
and other don’t,” adds Dr. Pollock. “That is not our specific
question but these studies will help address that. We have to
identify what is it about different individuals that make them react
more to stress, makes them retain more salt.”
Obesity, which is associated with
increased blood pressure reactivity, is probably a differentiator,
Dr. Pollock says. Fat cells actually secrete angiotensin, which gets
into the bloodstream.
“We are arguing in our study that
you might want to treat patients differently depending on whether or
not they are obese. The angiotensin receptor blocker may be more
effective in obese individuals who have angiotensin falling out into
their bloodstream,” says Dr. Harshfield. Consequently they’ll also
compare the effectiveness of the blocker in obese and normal-weight
individuals with impaired sodium excretion.
Another project is exploring the
role of oxidative stress, or reactive oxygen species, in raising
blood pressure. In an animal model genetically predisposed to
salt-sensitive hypertension, Dr. Jennifer Pollock, biochemist in
MCG’s Vascular Biology Center and a program project leader, has
shown a prolonged recovery to normal blood pressure following
stress.
She’s also found oxidative stress
levels go up with stress. Oxidative stress, or reactive oxygen
species, helps make normal chemical reactions in the body but, in
excess, can cause havoc. In fact, when she gives the rats an
antioxidant before a stressor, blood pressure doesn’t rise as high
and recovery is more normal.
“We also found out that endothelin
actually is the stimulus for increasing reactive oxygen species,”
Dr. Jennifer Pollock says. “When we gave the rats a specific type of
endothelin blocker, that also blocked the increase in oxidative
stress, blocked the blood pressure increase and improved recovery.”
Another animal model is providing
insight into the impact of early life stressors or low socioeconomic
status on cardiovascular disease. Research again found that, as with
people, these animals have normal blood pressure as pups. But as
stressed adult rats, they have higher pressure increases and a
delayed recovery unless they are missing an endothelin receptor
gene.
“It cures it,” says Dr. Jennifer
Pollock. “This early life stressor is being mediated through the
endothelin pathway.” Her postdoctoral fellow, Dr. Analia Loria,
found these early life stressor models also have more constrictive
blood vessels because they are more sensitive to angiotensin. New
studies will further test the endothelin connection and see if a
high-fat diet makes things worse by increasing oxidative stress.
Wildlife biologists have found
naturally occurring models. Rat pups whose mother builds a nest far
from a food source and so must be gone foraging several hours each
day, are more anxious. Neurobiologists have shown animals separated
from their moms for long periods can’t run through mazes well and
tend to back off in competition for food, Dr. Jennifer Pollock says.
“We took that to mean their blood pressure could also be hyper
reactive. Sure enough, that is what we found.”
“This has a lot of implications for
earlier detection of risk-increasing environmental exposures and
what you can do about it,” says Dr. Treiber, a clinical child
psychologist and program project leader. “If you can’t alter the
environment that quickly in life, you know now where they are headed
and maybe you can preempt it pharmacogenetically.”
In the diverse group of some 600
young people he’s been following for 17 years, Dr. Treiber has found
that, as with the general population, some already are obese and/or
hypertensive at the average age of 25. He’ll continue to follow and
annually assess them over the next five years in an effort to better
understand how stress contributes to hypertension.
“What we are doing is looking at
chronic environmental stress in combination with some bad candidate
genes that are stress activated,” says Dr. Treiber. He’s thinking
that, as with rats, genetic predisposition and stress can doom
people with normal pressures to hypertension. They’ll look at blood
pressure reactivity, recovery, sodium secretion, measure the
footprints left by oxidative stress and the levels of the stress
hormone cortisol. They’ll look at early indicators of cardiovascular
disease, such as enlargement of the pumping chamber of the heart and
signs of carotid artery disease.
“If you have a tendency to have
high blood pressure or if you are obese, we can see the inner layer
of the carotid getting thicker than normal people your age,” says
Dr. Gaston Kapuku, cardiologist and cardiovascular researcher at the
Georgia Prevention Institute and a project core leader.
America’s current obesity and type
2 diabetes epidemic also has them looking at insulin, glucose and
cholesterol levels and whether fat exacerbates all the factors they
are following, which they believe it does.
One reason the Georgia Prevention
Institute was founded was to identify risk factors for
cardiovascular disease, says Dr. Harshfield. In his 10 years at the
institute, the agenda has shifted from looking at precursor
development of adult hypertension to identifying mechanisms causing
pediatric hypertension, a disease that didn’t exist when most
hypertension textbooks were written, he says.
“Our ultimate goal, of course, is
prevention,” he says. “But when we can’t do that, we want to give
physicians ways to determine precisely the cause or causes of your
hypertension and optimal ways to target your disease.” -- Courtesy
of Psychcentral.com
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