BACKGROUND AND AIM: Hyperfibrinogenemia, a cardiovascular risk factor, is frequent in hypertension and largely unexplained. In this study, we measured fibrinogen production and whole-body protein turnover under both basal and hyperinsulinemic states, in hypertensive [H] and control [C] subjects, using a leucine stable isotope tracer and precursor-product relationships. METHODS AND RESULTS: Since hypertension is often a feature of the "metabolic", insulin resistance syndrome, which in turn affects both fibrinogen kinetics and whole-body protein turnover, we selected hypertensive subjects without the metabolic syndrome. Following basal measurements, an euglycemic, approximately euaminoacidemic, hyperinsulinemic clamp was performed, with plasma insulin raised to 700-900 pmol/L. In H, rates of the fractional and absolute synthesis (FSR and ASR, respectively) of fibrinogen were 30%-40% greater (p<0.05 or less) than in C in both states, whereas leucine turnover was normal. Hyperinsulinemia did not modify fibrinogen synthesis in either group with respect to baseline, whereas it suppressed leucine appearance from endogenous proteolysis by approximately 40% to same extent in both groups. Amino acid clearance was similar in both the H and C subjects. In H, the insulin-mediated glucose disposal (M) was approximately 25% lower, (although insignificantly) than in controls, showing no overall insulin resistance. There was an inverse correlation between M and fibrinogen FSR during the clamp. CONCLUSIONS: In essential hypertension fibrinogen production is increased, is not further stimulated by insulin, and is inversely related to insulin sensitivity at high-physiological insulin concentrations. Amino acid disposal and basal as well as insulin-responsive protein degradation rates are instead normal.

Fibrinogen kinetics and protein turnover in hypertension: Effects of insulin.

VETTORE, MONICA;SEMPLICINI, ANDREA;MILLIONI, RENATO;PURICELLI, LUCIA;BAIOCCHI, MARIA ROSA;TESSARI, PAOLO
2009

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIM: Hyperfibrinogenemia, a cardiovascular risk factor, is frequent in hypertension and largely unexplained. In this study, we measured fibrinogen production and whole-body protein turnover under both basal and hyperinsulinemic states, in hypertensive [H] and control [C] subjects, using a leucine stable isotope tracer and precursor-product relationships. METHODS AND RESULTS: Since hypertension is often a feature of the "metabolic", insulin resistance syndrome, which in turn affects both fibrinogen kinetics and whole-body protein turnover, we selected hypertensive subjects without the metabolic syndrome. Following basal measurements, an euglycemic, approximately euaminoacidemic, hyperinsulinemic clamp was performed, with plasma insulin raised to 700-900 pmol/L. In H, rates of the fractional and absolute synthesis (FSR and ASR, respectively) of fibrinogen were 30%-40% greater (p<0.05 or less) than in C in both states, whereas leucine turnover was normal. Hyperinsulinemia did not modify fibrinogen synthesis in either group with respect to baseline, whereas it suppressed leucine appearance from endogenous proteolysis by approximately 40% to same extent in both groups. Amino acid clearance was similar in both the H and C subjects. In H, the insulin-mediated glucose disposal (M) was approximately 25% lower, (although insignificantly) than in controls, showing no overall insulin resistance. There was an inverse correlation between M and fibrinogen FSR during the clamp. CONCLUSIONS: In essential hypertension fibrinogen production is increased, is not further stimulated by insulin, and is inversely related to insulin sensitivity at high-physiological insulin concentrations. Amino acid disposal and basal as well as insulin-responsive protein degradation rates are instead normal.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/2452470
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 1
  • Scopus 4
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 2
social impact