68 research outputs found

    No Elevated Plasma Catecholamine Levels during Sleep in Newly Diagnosed, Untreated Hypertensives

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    The sympatho-adrenergic system is highly involved in regulating sleep, wake and arousal states, and abnormalities in this system are regarded as a key factor in the development and progression of arterial hypertension. While hypertension is associated with a hyperadrenergic state during wakefulness, the effect of hypertension on plasma-catecholamine levels during sleep is not yet known. Twelve young participants with newly diagnosed, untreated hypertension and twelve healthy controls slept for 7 hours in the sleep laboratory. Before and after sleep, subjects rested in a supine position for 3-h periods of wakefulness. We sampled blood at a fast rate (1/10 min) and monitored blood pressure and heart rate continuously. We show that plasma NE and E levels did not differ between hypertensives and normotensive during sleep as well as before and after sleep. Blood pressure was higher in hypertensives, reaching the largest group difference in the morning after sleep. Unlike in the normotensives, in the hypertensive participants the morning rise in blood pressure did not correlate with the rise in catecholamine levels at awakening. Our results suggest that hypertension in its early stages is not associated with a strong hyperadrenergic state during sleep. In showing a diminished control of blood pressure through sympatho-adrenergic signals in hypertensive participants, our data point towards a possible involvement of dysfunctional sleep-related blood pressure regulation in the development of hypertension

    Heart Valve Tissue Engineering: Concepts, Approaches, Progress, and Challenges

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    Potential applications of tissue engineering in regenerative medicine range from structural tissues to organs with complex function. This review focuses on the engineering of heart valve tissue, a goal which involves a unique combination of biological, engineering, and technological hurdles. We emphasize basic concepts, approaches and methods, progress made, and remaining challenges. To provide a framework for understanding the enabling scientific principles, we first examine the elements and features of normal heart valve functional structure, biomechanics, development, maturation, remodeling, and response to injury. Following a discussion of the fundamental principles of tissue engineering applicable to heart valves, we examine three approaches to achieving the goal of an engineered tissue heart valve: (1) cell seeding of biodegradable synthetic scaffolds, (2) cell seeding of processed tissue scaffolds, and (3) in-vivo repopulation by circulating endogenous cells of implanted substrates without prior in-vitro cell seeding. Lastly, we analyze challenges to the field and suggest future directions for both preclinical and translational (clinical) studies that will be needed to address key regulatory issues for safety and efficacy of the application of tissue engineering and regenerative approaches to heart valves. Although modest progress has been made toward the goal of a clinically useful tissue engineered heart valve, further success and ultimate human benefit will be dependent upon advances in biodegradable polymers and other scaffolds, cellular manipulation, strategies for rebuilding the extracellular matrix, and techniques to characterize and potentially non-invasively assess the speed and quality of tissue healing and remodeling

    The Cell-Catch Procedure

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    Intranasal orexin A modulates sympathetic vascular tone - a pilot study in healthy male humans.

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    INTRODUCTION: Previous research suggests that the neuropeptide orexin A contributes to sympathetic blood pressure (BP) control inasmuch as hypothalamic injection of orexin A increases sympathetic vasomotor tone and arterial BP in rodents. In humans with narcolepsy, a disorder associated with loss of orexin-producing neurons, vasoconstrictive muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) is reduced. Since intranasally administered oligopeptides like orexin are known to modulate brain function, we investigated the effect of intranasal orexin A on vascular sympathetic baroreflex function in healthy humans. METHODS: In a balanced, double-blind cross-over study, orexin A (500 nmol) and placebo, respectively, were intranasally administered to 10 lean healthy males (age, 25.8±4.6 years). MSNA was assessed microneurographically before and 30-45 minutes after either substance administration. Additionally, baroreflex was challenged via graded infusions of vasoactive drugs before and after substance administration. Baroreflex function was defined as the correlation of BP with MSNA and heart rate. RESULTS: Intranasal orexin A compared to placebo induced a significant increase in resting MSNA from prior to post administration (Δ-burst rate, orexin A vs. placebo: +5.8±0.8 vs. +2.1±0.6; p=0.007; total activity (169±11.5% vs. 115±5.0%; p=0.002). BP, heart rate and sympathovagal balance to the heart, as represented by HRV, as well as baroreflex sensitivity during the vasoactive challenge were not altered. CONCLUSION: Intranasally administered orexin A acutely induced vasoconstrictory sympathoactivation in healthy male humans. This result suggests that orexin A mediates upward resetting of the vascular baroreflex setpoint at centers superordinate to the mere baroreflex-feedback-loop
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