Sympathetic Pathophysiology in Hypertension Origins: The Path to Renal Denervation

Author:

Esler Murray D.1,Osborn John W.2ORCID,Schlaich Markus P.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Human Neurotransmitter Laboratory, Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, VIC, Australia (M.D.E., M.P.S.).

2. Department of Surgery, Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis (J.W.O.).

3. Dobney Hypertension Centre, Medical School, Royal Perth Hospital Unit and RPH Research Foundation, The University of Western Australia (M.P.S.).

Abstract

The importance of the sympathetic nervous system in essential hypertension has been recognized in 2 eras. The first was in early decades of the 20 th century, through to the 1960s. Here, the sympathetic nervous system was identified as a target for the treatment of hypertension, and an extensive range of antiadrenergic therapies were developed. Then, after a period of lapsed interest, in a second era from 1985 on, the development of precise measures of human sympathetic nerve firing and transmitter release allowed demonstration of the importance of neural mechanisms in the initiation and maintenance of the arterial blood pressure elevation in hypertension. This led to the development of a device treatment of hypertension, catheter-based renal denervation, which we will discuss.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Reference87 articles.

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