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  5. Cardiac implications of increased arterial entry and reversible 24-h central and peripheral norepinephrine levels in melancholia

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Article
en
2005

Cardiac implications of increased arterial entry and reversible 24-h central and peripheral norepinephrine levels in melancholia

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0 Files

en
2005
Vol 102 (23)
Vol. 102
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0503069102

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George Chrousos
George Chrousos

National And Kapodistrian University Of Athens

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Philip W. Gold
Ma‐Li Wong
David S. Goldstein
+15 more

Abstract

The mortality of chronic heart failure (CHF) doubles either when CHF patients are depressed or when their plasma norepinephrine (NE) level exceeds those of controls by ≈40%. We hypothesized that patients with major depression had centrally driven, sustained, stress-related, and treatment-reversible increases in plasma NE capable of increasing mortality in CHF patients with depression. We studied 23 controls and 22 medication-free patients with melancholic depression. In severely depressed patients before and after electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), we measured cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) NE, plasma NE, plasma epinephrine (EPI), and plasma cortisol hourly for 30 h. In mildly-to-moderately depressed melancholic patients, we assessed basal and stress-mediated arterial NE appearance. Severely depressed patients had significant increases in mean around-the-clock levels of CSF NE ( P < 0.02), plasma NE ( P < 0.02), plasma EPI ( P < 0.02), and plasma cortisol ( P < 0.02). CSF NE, plasma NE, and cortisol all rose together throughout the night and peaked in the morning. Each fell to control values after ECT. Mildly-to-moderately melancholic patients also had increased basal ( P < 0.05) and stress-related ( P < 0.03) arterial NE-appearance rates. Severely melancholic depressed, medication-free patients had around-the-clock increases in plasma NE levels capable of increasing mortality in CHF. Twenty-four-hour indices of central noradrenergic, adrenomedullary, and adrenocortical secretion were also elevated. Concurrent diurnal rhythms of these secretions could potentiate their cardiotoxicity. Even mildly-to-moderately depressed melancholic patients had clinically relevant increases in the arterial NE-appearance rate. These findings will not apply to all clinical subtypes of major depression.

How to cite this publication

Philip W. Gold, Ma‐Li Wong, David S. Goldstein, Herman K. Gold, Donna Ronsaville, Murray Esler, Salvatore Alesci, Anwar Masood, Júlio Licinio, Thomas D. Geracioti, Giulia Perini, Michael D. DeBellis, Courtney Holmes, Alexandros N. Vgontzas, Dennis S. Charney, George Chrousos, Samuel M. McCann, Mitchel A. Kling (2005). Cardiac implications of increased arterial entry and reversible 24-h central and peripheral norepinephrine levels in melancholia. , 102(23), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0503069102.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2005

Authors

18

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0503069102

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