Clinical therapeutics
-
Clinical therapeutics · Jan 1987
Effects of enalapril maleate on blood pressure, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, and peripheral sympathetic activity in essential hypertension.
Recent experimental studies showed that inhibition of angiotensin II synthesis may reduce sympathetic activity as evaluated by plasma catecholamine assay, sharing in the antihypertensive effect of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. Fifteen patients with essential hypertension were studied. Blood pressure and heart rate were evaluated both at rest and after stressor laboratory tests, before and four hours after administration of 20 mg of enalapril maleate and on the 14th and 120th days of continued administration. ⋯ It has been demonstrated that the pressor effect of angiotensin II was blunted during exercise. Our hemodynamic and humoral results appear to confirm the hypothesis that enalapril maleate may reduce blood pressure by direct inhibition of ACE and of kininase II as well as by a decreased sympathetic output, which may be secondary to angiotensin II inhibition. These results agree with the recent experimental demonstration of a reduced sympathetic nervous response to nerve stimulation during ACE inhibition.