TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of renal sympathetic denervation on cardiac sympathetic activity and function in patients with therapy resistant hypertension
AU - van Brussel, Peter M.
AU - Eeftinck Schattenkerk, Daan W.
AU - Dobrowolski, Linn C.
AU - de Winter, Robbert J.
AU - Reekers, Jim A.
AU - Verberne, Hein J.
AU - Vogt, Liffert
AU - van den Born, Bert-Jan H.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Renal sympathetic denervation (RSD) is currently being investigated in multiple studies of sympathetically driven cardiovascular diseases such as heart failure and arrhythmias. Our aim was to assess systemic and cardiac sympatholytic effects of RSD by the measurement of cardiac sympathetic activity and cardiovascular parameters. A total of 21 consecutive patients with refractory hypertension (daytime ambulatory blood pressure (BP)≥150/100 mmHg despite the use of 3 or more antihypertensive drugs), no evidence for secondary hypertension and normal renovascular anatomy were included. RSD was performed with the Medtronic Symplicity renal denervation catheter with an average of 4.2 (range 3-6) ablations per renal artery. To assess cardiac sympathetic activity, 123I-mIBG cardiac scintigraphy was performed before and 6 weeks after. In addition, the effect of RSD on peripheral BP and cardiac hemodynamics were assessed non-invasively. 123I-mIBG uptake before and after RSD was 1.7±0.4% vs. 1.7±0.5% at 15 min. and 1.4±0.4% vs. 1.5±0.5% after 4 h. As a consequence, washout rate was similar before (33.7±11.7%) and after RSD (30.1±12.6%, p=0.27). In line with earlier RSD studies, a significant drop in systolic office BP (-12.2 mmHg, p=0.04) was detected, whereas the decrease in ambulatory BP was not significant. No changes were seen in heart rate, stroke volume or left ventricular contractility, both in supine position and after standing. In concert with previous reports, RSD leads to a significant drop in office BP. However, a reduction in sympathetic activity could not be demonstrated on a cardiac level
AB - Renal sympathetic denervation (RSD) is currently being investigated in multiple studies of sympathetically driven cardiovascular diseases such as heart failure and arrhythmias. Our aim was to assess systemic and cardiac sympatholytic effects of RSD by the measurement of cardiac sympathetic activity and cardiovascular parameters. A total of 21 consecutive patients with refractory hypertension (daytime ambulatory blood pressure (BP)≥150/100 mmHg despite the use of 3 or more antihypertensive drugs), no evidence for secondary hypertension and normal renovascular anatomy were included. RSD was performed with the Medtronic Symplicity renal denervation catheter with an average of 4.2 (range 3-6) ablations per renal artery. To assess cardiac sympathetic activity, 123I-mIBG cardiac scintigraphy was performed before and 6 weeks after. In addition, the effect of RSD on peripheral BP and cardiac hemodynamics were assessed non-invasively. 123I-mIBG uptake before and after RSD was 1.7±0.4% vs. 1.7±0.5% at 15 min. and 1.4±0.4% vs. 1.5±0.5% after 4 h. As a consequence, washout rate was similar before (33.7±11.7%) and after RSD (30.1±12.6%, p=0.27). In line with earlier RSD studies, a significant drop in systolic office BP (-12.2 mmHg, p=0.04) was detected, whereas the decrease in ambulatory BP was not significant. No changes were seen in heart rate, stroke volume or left ventricular contractility, both in supine position and after standing. In concert with previous reports, RSD leads to a significant drop in office BP. However, a reduction in sympathetic activity could not be demonstrated on a cardiac level
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2015.09.025
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2015.09.025
M3 - Article
C2 - 26447672
SN - 0167-5273
VL - 202
SP - 609
EP - 614
JO - International journal of cardiology
JF - International journal of cardiology
ER -