1. Early rise in blood pressure following administration of adrenocorticotropic hormone-[1-24] in humans.
- Author
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Jackson RV, Nye EJ, Grice JE, Hockings GI, Strakosch CR, Walters MM, Crosbie GV, Torpy DJ, and Whitworth JA
- Subjects
- Adrenocorticotropic Hormone administration & dosage, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone blood, Adult, Cosyntropin blood, Female, Heart Rate drug effects, Humans, Hydrocortisone blood, Male, Time Factors, Blood Pressure drug effects, Cosyntropin administration & dosage
- Abstract
1. An elevation in blood pressure has been consistently observed 24 h after adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) administration and is caused by increased ACTH-stimulated cortisol secretion, in association with increased cardiac output. The aim of the present study was to investigate the previously undefined time of onset of this increase in blood pressure in normal humans. 2. Ten normal healthy volunteers received 250 mg ACTH-[1-24], in 500 mL normal saline, infused at a constant rate over 8 h. Six subjects also received a placebo infusion (normal saline only). Blood pressure, heart rate and cortisol levels were determined hourly. Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH-[1-24] plus native ACTH) was measured at 0, 1, 7 and 8 h. 3. Infusion of ACTH-[1-24] produced maximal secretion rates of cortisol, resulting in a mean peak plasma level of 985 +/- 46 nmol/L at 8 h. In response, blood pressure and heart rate rose significantly by 2 h and remained generally elevated for the duration of the infusion. 4. The early onset of haemodynamic responses is consistent with classical steroid receptor-mediated genomic mechanisms, but could be due non-genomic mechanisms. 5. The cardiovascular consequences of therapeutic use of ACTH are well recognized. This results of the present study suggest that even diagnostic administration of ACTH, delivered over a few hours, may raise blood pressure.
- Published
- 2001
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