Atenolol’s Inferior Ability to Reduce Central vs Peripheral Blood Pressure Can Be Explained by the Combination of Its Heart Rate-Dependent and Heart Rate-Independent Effects

Author:

Teeäär Tuuli12,Serg Martin13,Paapstel Kaido12,Vähi Mare4,Kals Jaak567,Cockcroft John R.8,Zilmer Mihkel5,Eha Jaan12,Kampus Priit13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Tartu, 8 Puusepa Street, Tartu 50406, Estonia

2. Heart Clinic, Tartu University Hospital, 8 Puusepa Street, Tartu 50406, Estonia

3. Centre of Cardiology, North Estonia Medical Centre, 19 Sütiste Street, Tallinn 13419, Estonia

4. Institute of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Tartu, 2 J. Liivi Street, Tartu 50409, Estonia

5. Department of Biochemistry, Centre of Excellence for Genomics and Translational Medicine, Institute of Biomedicine and Translational Medicine, University of Tartu, 19 Ravila Street, Tartu 50411, Estonia

6. Department of Surgery, Institute of Clinical Medicine, Tartu University Hospital, 8 Puusepa Street, Tartu 50406, Estonia

7. Surgery Clinic, Tartu University Hospital, 8 Puusepa Street, Tartu 50406, Estonia

8. Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Columbia University, 622 West 168th Street, New York, NY 10032, USA

Abstract

Objective. Whether the inferior ability of atenolol to reduce central (aortic) compared to peripheral (brachial) blood pressure (BP) is related to its heart rate (HR)-dependent or -independent effects, or their combination, remains unclear. To provide further mechanistic insight into this topic, we studied the acute effects of atenolol versus nebivolol and ivabradine on systolic blood pressure amplification (SBPA; peripheral systolic BP minus central systolic BP) in a model of sick sinus syndrome patients with a permanent dual-chamber cardiac pacemaker in a nonrandomized single-blind single-group clinical trial. Methods. We determined hemodynamic indices noninvasively (Sphygmocor XCEL) before and at least 3 h after administration of oral atenolol 50 or 100 mg, nebivolol 5 mg, or ivabradine 5 or 7.5 mg during atrial pacing at a low (40 bpm), middle (60 bpm), and high (90 bpm) HR level in 25 participants (mean age 65.5 years, 12 men). Results. At the low HR level, i.e., when the drugs could exert their HR-dependent and HR-independent effects on central BP, only atenolol produced a significant decrease in SBPA (mean change 0.74 ± 1.58 mmHg (95% CI, 0.09–1.40; P=0.028)), indicating inferior central vs peripheral systolic BP change. However, we observed no significant change in SBPA with atenolol at the middle and high HR levels, i.e., when HR-dependent mechanisms had been eliminated by pacing. Conclusion. The findings of our trial with a mechanistic approach to the topic imply that the inferior ability of atenolol to reduce central vs peripheral BP can be explained by the combination of its heart rate-dependent and -independent effects. This trial is registered with NCT03245996.

Funder

Estonian Ministry of Education and Research

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Internal Medicine

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