Hypertension Research
Online ISSN : 1348-4214
Print ISSN : 0916-9636
ISSN-L : 0916-9636
Plasma Free Dopamine: Physiological Variability and Pathophysiological Significance
Yukio MiuraToshiya WatanabeTakao NoshiroKazumasa ShimizuTaku KusakariHiroyoshi AkamaSatoru ShibukawaWakako MiuraTakashi OhzekiMasaki TakahashiNaoki Sano
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1995 Volume 18 Issue SupplementI Pages S65-S72

Details
Abstract
Dopamine (DA) is the most abundant catecholamines in human plasma and exists mostly in the sulfoconjugated form (DA sulfate), a biologically inactive metabolite. The paucity of unconjugated DA (PDA) in plasma throws doubt on its physiological significance. However, PDA, when measured with a highly sensitive radioenzymatic method, showed quite different features from norepinephrine and epinephrine in some types of clinical hypertension, lower in essential hypertension and higher in primary aldosteronism and pheochromocytoma. There was a weak but significant correlation between the values of PDA and DA sulfate measured in the same specimens, but DA sulfate was more susceptible to impaired renal function. Upright posture, high salt diets and an intravenous injection of metoclopramide (MCP, 10 mg), a DA receptor antagonist, induced a slight but significant increase in PDA in normal and hypertensive subjects. An intravenous dexamethasone (2mg) caused a gradual increase in PDA over 150min after medication, which was completely blocked by concomitant administration of α-methyl-p-tyrosine, a tyrosine hydroxylase inhibitor. The responses of PDA to both high salt diets and MCP were blunted in salt-sensitive patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension. The results suggest that DA is not only a precursor of norepinephrine biosynthesis but also plays an inherent role as an active neurotransmitter in the peripheral sympathoadrenal system, and that PDA is a sensitive marker of peripheral dopaminergic activity, which may operate to modulate the cardiovascular and endocrine functions and participate in the pathogenesis of some types of hypertension. (Hypertens Res 1995; 18 Suppl. I: S65-S72)
Content from these authors
© The Japanese Society of Hypertension
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top