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Abstract —Previous reports suggest that neuronal norepinephrine (NE) reuptake may be impaired in essential hypertension, perhaps because of dysfunction of the NE transporter, although the evidence is inconclusive. To further test this proposition, we applied phenotypically relevant radiotracer methodology, infusion of tritiated NE and quantification of NE metabolites, to 34 healthy lean subjects (body mass index <27.0 kg/m 2 ), 19 overweight (body mass index >28.0 kg/m 2 ) but otherwise healthy normotensive subjects, 13 untreated lean patients with essential hypertension, and 14 obesity-related hypertensives. Spillover of NE from the heart was increased in lean hypertensives only (mean±SD 33.4±20.6 versus 16.1±11.7 ng/min in lean normotensives, P <0.05), but this could have resulted from high cardiac sympathetic nerve firing rates, faulty NE reuptake, or both. The arterial plasma concentration of 3-methoxy-4-hydroxylphenylglycol, an extraneuronal metabolite of NE, was elevated in lean hypertensives only (3942±1068 versus 3055±888 pg/mL in healthy subjects, P <0.05). The fractional extraction of plasma tritiated NE in passage through the heart, determined on the basis of neuronal NE uptake, was reduced in lean essential hypertensives (0.65±0.19 versus 0.81±0.11 in healthy subjects, P <0.05). Cardiac release of the tritiated NE metabolite [ 3 H]dihydroxylphenylglycol, produced intraneuronally by monoamine oxidase after uptake of [ 3 H]NE by the transporter, was reduced in lean hypertensives only (992±1435 versus 4588±3189 dpm/min in healthy subjects, P <0.01) These findings suggest that neuronal reuptake of NE is impaired in essential hypertension. Through amplification of the neural signal, such a defect could constitute a neurogenic variant of essential hypertension. In obesity-related hypertension, there was no phenotypic evidence of NE transporter dysfunction.