Hemodynamic and plasma catecholamine responses to hyperthermic cancer therapy in humans

Abstract
Cancer patients, treated with hyperthermia (to 41.5 degrees C) under thiopental and fentanyl anesthesia, had smaller increases in heart rate and cardiac index and lesser decreases in mean arterial pressure than those reported in normal volunteers. At basal body temperature anesthesia did not alter catecholamine levels. Increasing body temperature to 39.5 degrees C and 41.5 degrees C resulted in parallel increases in heart rate and cardiac index that were directly related to the increases in plasma norepinephrine levels. At basal temperature cutaneous venous plasma norepinephrine levels exceeded those of arterial; mixed-venous plasma levels were intermediate. At 39.5 degrees C and 41.5 degrees C there were sequential increases in plasma norepinephrine. The increases in mixed-venous and arterial norepinephrine were significantly greater than in cutaneous venous blood. The differential increases in norepinephrine levels in cutaneous venous, mixed-venous, and arterial blood indicate that during hyperthermia sympathetic nerve activity in skin is decreased while that in other areas is increased, suggesting that alterations in sympathetic activity modulate the hemodynamic changes that attend hyperthermia in man.