Oral hydrocortisone increases blood pressure and enhances pressor responsiveness in normal human subjects. We studied the effects of 1 week of oral hydrocortisone (200 mg/day) on blood pressure, cardiac output, total peripheral resistance, forearm vascular resistance, and norepinephrine spillover to plasma in eight healthy male volunteers. Although diastolic blood pressure remained unchanged, systolic blood pressure increased from 119 to 135 mm Hg (SED +/- 3.4, p less than 0.01), associated with an increased cardiac output (5.85-7.73 l/min, SED +/- 0.46, p less than 0.01). Total peripheral vascular resistance fell from 15.1 to 12.2 mm Hg/l/min (SED +/- 1.03, p less than 0.05). Resting forearm vascular resistance remained unchanged, but the reflex response to the cold pressor test was accentuated, the rise in resistance increasing from 10.5 mm Hg/ml/100 ml/min (R units) before treatment to 32.6 R units after treatment (SED +/- 6.4, p less than 0.025). The rise in forearm vascular resistance accompanying intra-arterial norepinephrine (25, 50, and 100 ng/min) was also significantly greater after hydrocortisone, increasing from an average of 14.9 +/- 2.4 R units before treatment to 35.1 +/- 5.5 R units after hydrocortisone (SED +/- 6.0, p less than 0.05). A shift to the left in the dose-response relation and fall in threshold suggested increased sensitivity to norepinephrine after treatment. Measurement of resting norepinephrine spillover rate to plasma and norepinephrine uptake indicated that overall resting sympathetic nervous system activity was not increased. The rise in resting blood pressure with hydrocortisone is associated with an increased cardiac output (presumably due to increased blood volume).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ACTH administration (0.5 mg Synacthen Depot I/M 12 hourly for 5 days) significantly increased systolic blood pressure in normotensive subjects (n=6) and mild essential hypertensives (n=6) but not in 2 Addisonian women, indicating that the pressure rise was adrenally dependent. ACTH administration was associated with urinary sodium retention, hypokalaemia, elevation of fasting blood glucose, lymphopaenia and eosinopaenia. Body weight was increased only in the normotensive subjects. Plasma renin concentration fell and renin substrate rose. Inactive renin fell in the hypertensive subjects only. Plasma cortisol, 11-deoxycortisol, corticosterone, deoxycorticosterone, 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone and 17-hydroxy, 20-dihydroprogesterone were all increased by ACTH treatment. Plasma aldosterone rose initially in the normotensives but then fell. ACTH administration in man produces metabolic and hormonal changes similar to those produced by ACTH in sheep but the rise in blood pressure is systolic only in man. The steroid(s) responsible for the blood pressure rise with ACTH in man have not been defined.
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