AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have a higher risk of cardiovascular events, possibly due to increased sympathetic activity affecting blood pressure (BP).
  • A study involving patients with CKD and matched control groups measured sympathetic nerve activity and BP during rest, finding no significant differences in BP responses to sympathetic bursts among the groups.
  • The results suggest that patients with CKD do not exhibit enhanced sympathetic transduction to BP compared to control groups, indicating that other factors may contribute to their increased cardiovascular risk.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are more than twice as likely to die from a cardiovascular event than those with normal kidney function. Although CKD may increase resting sympathetic activity, quantification of resting sympathetic outflow alone does not account for the ensuing vasoconstriction, and blood pressure (BP) change (i.e., sympathetic transduction). Patients with CKD have been reported to exhibit elevated α-adrenergic receptor sensitivity, which may predispose this population to greater sympathetic transduction. We tested the hypothesis that patients with CKD have augmented sympathetic transduction to BP.

Methods: In 16 patients with CKD, 17 bodyweight-matched (BWM) controls, and 11 lean controls of a similar age muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and beat-to-beat BP were continuously recorded during quiet supine rest. Signal averaging was used to quantify changes in mean arterial pressure (MAP) and total vascular conductance (TVC) following spontaneous bursts of MSNA.

Results: Peak increases in MAP following MSNA bursts were not different among patients with CKD and the control groups (CKD: 2.3 ± 1.1 mmHg; BWM controls: 2.1 ± 1.0 mmHg; lean controls: 1.7 ± 0.9 mmHg; P = 0.28). Likewise, nadir reductions in TVC following all bursts of MSNA were not different among patients with CKD and either control group (P = 0.69). Both patients with CKD and controls had graded increases in MAP and decreases in TVC with increasing burst size, which were not different among groups (all P > 0.05).

Conclusion: In summary, these data indicate that patients with CKD do not have augmented sympathetic transduction to BP.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10286-024-01084-7DOI Listing

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