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15 April 1993 | Volume 118 Issue 8 | Pages 619-621
Reflex sympathetic dystrophy is a symptom complex characterized by vasomotor instability, hyperesthesia, and pain. Hypothesizing that these symptoms could reflect diminished sympathetic innervation with resultant
Author and Article Information
Requests for Reprints: J. Malcolm O. Arnold, MD, Victoria Hospital, 375 South Street, London, Ontario N6A 4G5, Canada.
BRIEF REPORT
Increased Venous Alpha-Adrenoceptor Responsiveness in Patients with Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy
-adrenoceptor hyper-responsiveness, we studied 11 patients who developed upper-limb reflex sympathetic dystrophy after hemiplegia or trauma and 11 normal controls who were similar in age to the study patients. The diameter of superficial hand veins was measured using a linear variable differential transformer during local infusion of saline and increasing concentrations of noradrenaline. The limbs affected with reflex sympathetic dystrophy showed marked
-adrenoceptor hyper-responsiveness; that is, less noradrenaline was required to cause 50% venoconstriction (1.5 compared with 6.8 ng/min, P = 0.001). The unaffected limb in patients with reflex sympathetic dystrophy also showed hyper-responsiveness to noradrenaline when compared with values in normal controls (6.8 compared with 27.4 ng/min, P = 0.01), with such hyper-responsiveness being more marked in patients with hemiplegia. The findings provide the first direct evidence in humans of hyper-responsiveness of vascular
-adrenoceptors to noradrenaline in reflex sympathetic dystrophy.
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Acknowledgment: The authors thank Gord Marchiori, PhD, and Amy Lui for assistance in data analysis.
Grant Support: Dr. Arnold was supported by a Career Health Scientist Award of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of Canada.
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