1. Renal nerve stimulation: complete versus incomplete renal sympathetic denervation
- Author
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Annemiek F. Hoogerwaard, Ahmet Adiyaman, Mark R. de Jong, Jaap-Jan J. Smit, Jan-Evert Heeg, Boudewijn A. A. M. van Hasselt, and Arif Elvan
- Subjects
renal sympathetic denervation ,renal nerve stimulation ,hypertension ,autonomic nervous system ,procedural endpoint ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Purpose Blood pressure (BP) reduction after renal sympathetic denervation (RDN) is highly variable. Renal nerve stimulation (RNS) can localize sympathetic nerves. The RNS trial aimed to investigate the medium-term BP-lowering effects of the use of RNS during RDN, and explore if RNS can check the completeness of the denervation. Material and methods Forty-four treatment-resistant hypertensive patients were included in the prospective, single-center RNS trial. The primary study endpoint was change in 24-h BP at 6- to 12-month follow-up after RDN. The secondary study endpoints were the acute procedural RNS-induced BP response before and after RDN; number of antihypertensive drugs at follow-up; and the correlation between the RNS-induced BP increase before versus after RDN (delta [Δ] RNS-induced BP). Results Before RDN, the RNS-induced systolic BP rise was 43(±21) mmHg, and decreased to 9(±12) mmHg after RDN (p 0 mmHg residual RNS-induced BP response (126 ± 4 mmHg versus 135 ± 10 mmHg, p = 0.04). 83% of the patients with ≤0 mmHg residual RNS-induced BP response had normal 24-h BP at follow-up, compared to 33% in the patients with >0 mmHg residual RNS-induced BP response (p = 0.023). Conclusion The use of RNS during RDN leads to clinically significant and sustained lowering of 24-h BP with fewer antihypertensive drugs at follow-up. RNS-induced BP changes were correlated with 24-h BP changes at follow-up. Moreover, patients with complete denervation had significant lower BP compared to the patients with incomplete denervation.
- Published
- 2021
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