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The sympathetic nervous system in hypertension

113

Citations

45

References

2003

Year

TLDR

The study aimed to determine whether sympathetic nervous system activity contributes to hypertension by measuring low‑frequency oscillations of systolic blood pressure and the blood‑pressure response to autonomic blockade in patients with multiple system atrophy, pure autonomic failure, essential hypertension, and normotension. Low‑frequency systolic‑blood‑pressure oscillations were higher in sympathetic‑dependent multiple system atrophy and essential hypertension, and autonomic blockade lowered blood pressure below 125 mmHg in normotensives and most MSA patients but not in pure autonomic failure; the reduction in oscillations correlated with the blood‑pressure fall, and ganglionic blockade combined with LF(SBP) distinguished sympathetic‑dependent from sympathetic‑independent hypertension, indicating a potential method for assessing sympathetic contribution in essential hypertension.

Abstract

To determine if the contribution of the sympathetic nervous system to blood pressure could be evidenced by low-frequency oscillations of systolic blood pressure (LF(SBP)), reflecting vascular sympathetic modulation, or by the decrease in blood pressure after autonomic blockade.We studied multiple system atrophy (MSA) patients, in whom supine hypertension is maintained by residual sympathetic tone ('positive controls'); pure autonomic failure (PAF) patients, in whom supine hypertension is largely independent of sympathetic tone ('negative controls'); essential hypertensive patients (HTN) and normotensive subjects (NTN).Supine systolic blood pressure (SBP) was 204 +/- 8, 185 +/- 6, 177 +/- 9 and 130 +/- 4 mmHg in MSA, PAF, HTN and NTN, respectively. LF(SBP) was higher in MSA and HTN (5.7 +/- 1.5 and 5.8 +/- 1.4 mmHg(2) compared to NTN and PAF (3.3 +/- 0.5 and 1.1 +/- 0.5 mmHg(2). Trimethaphan 2-4 mg/min induced complete autonomic blockade and lowered SBP below 125 mmHg in all NTN and all but one MSA (to 111 +/- 3 and 97 +/- 9 mmHg). SBP remained elevated in PAF (164 +/- 7 mmHg). Responses in HTN were variable; SBP decreased below 125 mmHg in three and remained elevated in four patients. The decrease in LF(SBP) correlated with the reduction in SBP, with a steeper slope in MSA and HTN compared to NTN (29.0 +/- 5.5, 8.4 +/- 1.6 and 3.6 +/- 1.2 mmHg/mmH (2), respectively).Ganglionic blockade, alone or coupled to LF(SBP), discriminated between human models of sympathetic-dependent (MSA) and independent (PAF) hypertension. This approach may aid in assessing the contribution of the sympathetic nervous system in essential hypertension, in which sympathetic dependence is variably expressed.

References

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