Sympathetic activation and heart rate thresholds for cardiovascular risk in chronic kidney disease

Aim: The current study was designed at assessing whether the sympathetic cardiovascular drive (SNS) is differently activated in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients displaying less or more elevated resting heart rate (HR) values. It was also designed at determining at which HR cutoff value the SNS displays a greater activation. Methods: In 95 CKD middle-age patients we evaluated muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA, microneurography) and venous plasma norepinephrine (HPLC assay), subdividing the patients in different groups according to their resting clinic and 24-h HR. Results: In CKD progressively greater values of clinic or 24-h HR were associated with a progressive increase in both MSNA and norepinephrine. HR cutoff values indicated by large-scale clinical trials for determining cardiorenal risk, that is more than 80 bpm, were associated with MSNA values significantly greater than the ones detected in patients with lower HR, this being the case also for norepinephrine. Both MSNA and norepinephrine were significantly related to clinic (r = 0.47, P 
Source: Journal of Hypertension - Category: Cardiology Tags: ORIGINAL ARTICLES Source Type: research