|
|
||||||||
1 Cardiology Section, Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University College of Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital, 600 Taipei; 2 College of Medicine, National Cheng Kung University, Tainan; and 3 College of Public Health, National Taiwan University and 4 Department of Surgery, National Taiwan University Hospital, 600 Taipei, Taiwan
Distension of the
urinary bladder causes an increase in efferent sympathetic activity,
which can precipitate myocardial ischemia. Smoking has been shown to
modulate activities of afferent nerves from the distended urinary
bladder and to impair endothelial function in response to sympathetic
activation. To assess the effect of bladder distension on coronary
dynamics in smokers, we measured epicardial and microvascular responses
in 24 patients with early atherosclerosis (< 50% diameter stenosis).
Patients were classified into habitual smokers (group 1,
n = 14) and nonsmokers (group 2,
n = 10). Habitual smokers were randomized into two
subgroups on the basis of the use of doxazosin, as follows:
subgroup 1A (n = 7), without administration
of doxazosin before catheterization; subgroup 1B
(n = 7), with dosing doxazosin. In response to bladder distension (mean intravesical pressure 21.5 mmHg), bladder distension significantly decreased coronary diameter at the stenotic segments, coronary blood flow, and increased coronary resistance compared with
baseline values, in subgroup 1A patients. In subgroup
1B patients during bladder distension, coronary diameter, coronary blood flow, and coronary resistance did not show significant changes compared with baseline values. There were significant differences of
coronary diameter at the stenotic segments, coronary blood flow, and of
changes of coronary vascular resistance between subgroup 1A
and group 2 during bladder distension, despite similar
changes in rate-pressure product. The present study showed that urinary bladder distension caused an abnormal vasomotor response of epicardial vasoconstriction and a concomitant increased coronary resistance, which
leads to reduction in coronary blood flow in patients with early
atherosclerosis. Smoking may further impair the response, implying that
smoking has exaggerated response to sympathetic stimulation of conduit
and resistance vessels. The abnormal response was abolished by
pretreated administration of doxazosin, suggesting that the involved
mechanisms are related to
1-adrenoceptors.
intracoronary Doppler flow; urinary distension
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
H.-J. Yu, B.-R. Lin, H.-S. Lee, C.-T. Shun, C.-C. Yang, T.-Y. Lai, C.-T. Chien, and S.-M. Hsu Sympathetic vesicovascular reflex induced by acute urinary retention evokes proinflammatory and proapoptotic injury in rat liver Am J Physiol Renal Physiol, May 1, 2005; 288(5): F1005 - F1014. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |