Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8995933 Medical Hypotheses 2005 5 Pages PDF
Abstract
Hydration and volume expansion regimens are widely thought to offer symptomatic benefit in many human ailments. Many varied theories for the phenomenon exists such as decreased blood viscocity in cardiac disease, dilution of toxins in cancer, and cleansing effect on airways in asthma. While it is plausible that disparate mechanisms are involved in different conditions, we propose an alternative, unifying hypothesis that many of the clinical benefits of hydration and volume expansion are partly related to reduced sympatho-vagal ratio. Hypovolemia triggers baroreceptor-mediated sympathetic response and neurohormonal activation to promote fluid retention. Emerging evidence suggests that many diseases including cardiovascular, neurologic, gastrointestinal, metabolic, inflammatory, thrombotic, viral, and oncologic conditions are manifestations of abnormal sympathetic bias and associated T helper 2 bias. Hypovolemia-induced sympathetic activation, especially if baroreceptor dysfunction is involved, can worsen these conditions. Hydration and volume expansion may lower sympatho-vagal ratio, thereby tempering a wide variety of clinical conditions linked directly or indirectly to adrenergia including, but not limited to, acute coronary syndromes, asthma, cancer, and stroke. Interestingly, isotonic or hypertonic hydration, rather than a low-salt diet, may be a counterintuitive potential strategy to treat some cases of hypertension associated with dehydration and autonomic dysfunction. In contrast to the putative causal relationship between them, perhaps hypertension and end-organ damage represent independent consequences of dysfunctional sympathetic and neurohormonal activation. Venipuncture enables faster volume expansion but may also be a source of sympathetic hyperactivity. Oral hydration may additionally promote vagal tone by triggering gastric distension, a benefit not offered by intravenous fluids. The empiric benefits of hydration and volume expansion portend novel methods to treat a wide range of clinical conditions through pharmacologic or electrical modulation of cardiovascular or gastrointestinal baroreceptors.
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