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Defective Cardiac Parasympathetic Control in Patients with Heart Disease

List of authors.
  • Dwain L. Eckberg, M.D.,
  • Morris Drabinsky, M.D.,
  • and Eugene Braunwald, M.D.

Abstract

To define the state of the parasympathetic nervous system in heart failure, parasympathetic blockade with atropine was induced after adrenergic blockade with propranolol in 12 normal subjects and in nine patients with heart disease. Atropine elevated heart rate by 55 ± 9 per cent in normal subjects, but by only 23 ± 8 per cent in patients with heart disease (p less than 0.05). In 23 control subjects and 22 patients, transient elevations in arterial pressure were produced by intravenous injections of phenylephrine, and successive R-R intervals were plotted as a function of systolic pressure. The slowing of heart rate per unit rise in systolic arterial pressure averaged 16.0 ±1.8 msec per millimeter of mercury in normal subjects but only 3.70 ± 0.8 msec per millimeter of mercury in the patients (p less than 0.001). Baroreceptor-induced slowing of heart rate in normal subjects was shown to be mediated by the parasympathetic nervous system since it could be abolished with atropine. These findings point to a profound abnormality in parasympathetic cardiovascular regulation in heart disease.

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by grants (HE 12373, HE 39537 and HE 05846) from the U. S. Public Health Service.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Medicine, University of California. San Diego School of Medicine (address reprint requests to Dr. Braunwald at 225 W. Dickinson St., San Diego, Cal. 92103).

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