Role of Sympathetic Nervous System in Cyclosporine-Induced Rise in Blood Pressure

Author:

Carvalho Mario J.1,van den Meiracker Anton H.1,Boomsma Frans1,Freitas Joao1,Man in ‘t Veld Arie J.1,Costa Ovidio1,de Freitas Antonio Falcão1

Affiliation:

1. From the Centro de Estudos de Função Autonomica, Hospital S. Joao, Oporto Medical School, Oporto (M.J.C., J.F., O.C., A.F.), Portugal, and the Department of Internal Medicine I, University Hospital Dijkzigt, Erasmus University, Rotterdam (A.H.M., F.B., A.J.M.), The Netherlands.

Abstract

Abstract —To clarify the role of the sympathetic nervous system in the development of cyclosporine A (CsA)-induced rise in blood pressure (BP), the effects of CsA on 24-hour ambulatory BP (ABP) were studied in patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) who underwent a liver transplantation. On the basis of autonomic function tests, patients with absent or mild-to-moderate sympathetic damage (Group A, n=11, age 29 to 43 years, disease duration 2 to 6 years) and patients with severe sympathetic damage (Group B, n=9, age 27 to 38 years, disease duration 3 to 9 years) were identified. Both groups were followed for 1 year. The daily doses of CsA and the CsA whole blood trough levels between the groups did not differ. Pretransplantation values of daytime and nighttime ABP were, respectively, 117±8/76±7 mm Hg and 108±12/68±9 mm Hg in group A and 107±6/66±4 mm Hg ( P <0.05 group A versus group B) and 102±6/62±4 mm Hg in group B. In response to CsA, BP increased in all patients, but more so in patients of group B than in patients of group A. One year after transplantation, daytime and nighttime ABP had increased by 6±9/3±11% and 12±10/14±14% in group A and by 12±6/13±10% ( P <0.05) and 21±11/27±21% ( P <0.01) in group B. In both groups, the increase in nighttime ABP was greater than the increase in daytime ABP, which resulted in an attenuation or, even, a reversal of the diurnal BP rhythm. Because the rise in BP was greater in patients with more advanced sympathetic dysfunction, the sympathetic nervous system appears to counteract the CsA-induced rise in BP rather than causing it. This implies involvement of factors other than sympathetic activation in the pathogenesis of CsA-induced rise in BP in patients with familial amyloid polyneuropathy.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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