Neurovascular Contact of Cranial Nerve IX and X Root-Entry Zone in Hypertensive Patients

Author:

Hohenbleicher Henriette1,Schmitz Stephan A.1,Koennecke Hans-Christian1,Offermann Ralf1,Offermann Jens1,Zeytountchian Helen1,Wolf Karl-Jürgen1,Distler Armin1,Sharma Arya M.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Internal Medicine (H.H., R.O., J.O., H.Z., A.D., A.M.S.), Division of Endocrinology and Nephrology, the Department of Radiology (S.A.S., K.-J.W.), and the Department of Neurology (H.-C.K.), Universitätsklinikum Benjamin Franklin, Berlin, Germany.

Abstract

Abstract —Neurovascular contact of the left rostral ventrolateral medulla has been implicated in the pathogenesis of “essential” hypertension, and recent intervention studies suggest that surgical decompression of the ventrolateral medulla lowers blood pressure in these patients. We assessed the prevalence of this vascular anomaly in patients with essential hypertension by using an advanced MRI technique. We performed MRI of the brain stem in 125 hypertensive patients and in 105 age-matched, sex-matched, and body mass index–matched normotensive control subjects. Imaging of the root-entry zone of cranial nerves IX and X was performed by combining a high-resolution 3D constructive interference in steady-state sequence with a flow-sensitive time-of-flight technique, and images were independently assessed by 4 readers using predefined criteria. Left-sided neurovascular contact was found in 23% of the hypertensive patients and in 16% of the normotensive individuals ( P =0.12). Blood pressure level, heart rate, and number of antihypertensive medications in treated hypertensive patients were similar among patients with positive, borderline, and negative brain stem findings. Our findings cast doubt on the importance of left-sided neurovascular contact as a frequent cause of essential hypertension or as a major factor determining the severity of hypertension in patients with this anomaly.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

Reference32 articles.

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2. Role of rostral ventrolateral medulla in centrally mediated pressor responses

3. Meeting Abstracts, Joint Meeting of the Neurosurgical Society of America and the Mexican Society of Neurological Surgery, Acapulco, Mexico, January 22 to 26, 1978

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