Ethanol modulation of plasma norepinephrine response to trauma and hemorrhage

1989 
Does ethanol affect the adrenergic response to trauma? In 52 trauma victims, grouped according to blood ethanol concentrations, we found there was a significantly higher mean plasma norepinephrine (NE) concentration in heavy imbibers than in those with no detectable blood ethanol (790 +/- 84 pg/ml vs. 1,260 +/- 310; p = 0.02). To control confounding variables such as intensity of pain, injury severity, etc., we selected blood loss (0.9% body weight over 15 min), as an aspect of trauma to study in six normal subjects before and after ingestion of 6 oz and 10 oz of 86-proof liquor on successive days. As expected, the increase in plasma NE upon assumption of an upright position was accentuated by blood loss, (384 +/- 43 pg/ml prebleed; 694 +/- 16 post-bleed; p = 0.001). The postural or hypovolemic effect on plasma NE was enhanced by ingestion of ethanol at 6 oz prebleed (529 +/- 42 pg/ml pre-ethanol vs. 732 +/- 64 post ethanol; p = 0.02) or at 10 oz post-bleed (694 +/- 16 pg/ml vs. 1,154 +/- 166; p = 0.04). There was an approximate dose-response effect of ethanol on plasma NE under all conditions; for example, post-bleeding upright NE: 717 +/- 57, no ethanol; 1,045 +/- 221, 6 oz ethanol, and 1,257 +/- 182, 10 oz ethanol. Plasma epinephrine concentrations were not significantly affected by positional changes, blood loss, or ethanol consumption.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) Language: en
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