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Erschienen in: Clinical Research in Cardiology 7/2016

04.01.2016 | Original Paper

Renal denervation improves exercise blood pressure: insights from a randomized, sham-controlled trial

verfasst von: Karl Fengler, Diana Heinemann, Thomas Okon, Karoline Röhnert, Thomas Stiermaier, Maximilian von Röder, Christian Besler, Ulrike Müller, Robert Höllriegel, Gerhard Schuler, Steffen Desch, Philipp Lurz

Erschienen in: Clinical Research in Cardiology | Ausgabe 7/2016

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Abstract

Introduction

Despite the ongoing debate on the role of renal sympathetic denervation (RSD) in the management of therapy-resistant hypertension, little is known about its possible effects on exercise blood pressure (BP), a known predictor for future cardiovascular events. We sought to evaluate the effect of RSD on exercise BP in a randomized, sham-controlled trial in patients with mild hypertension.

Methods and results

Patients with therapy-resistant mild hypertension (defined by mean daytime systolic BP between 135 and 149 mmHg or mean daytime diastolic BP between 90 and 94 mmHg on 24-h ambulatory BP measurement) were randomized to either radiofrequency-based RSD or a sham procedure. Patients underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing at baseline and after 6 months. Of the 71 patients randomized, data from cardiopulmonary exercise testing were available for 48 patients (22 in the RSD group, 26 in the sham group). After 6 months, patients undergoing RSD had a significantly lower systolic BP at maximum exercise workload compared to baseline (−14.2 ± 26.1 mmHg, p = 0.009). In contrast, no change was observed in the sham group (0.6 ± 22.9 mmHg, p = 0.45, p = 0.04 for between-group comparison). When analyzing patients with exaggerated baseline exercise BP only, the effect was even more pronounced (RSD vs. sham −29.5 ± 23.4 vs. 0.1 ± 25.3 mmHg, p = 0.008).

Conclusion

Exercise systolic BP values in patients with mild therapy-resistant hypertension are reduced after RSD as compared to a sham-procedure.
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Metadaten
Titel
Renal denervation improves exercise blood pressure: insights from a randomized, sham-controlled trial
verfasst von
Karl Fengler
Diana Heinemann
Thomas Okon
Karoline Röhnert
Thomas Stiermaier
Maximilian von Röder
Christian Besler
Ulrike Müller
Robert Höllriegel
Gerhard Schuler
Steffen Desch
Philipp Lurz
Publikationsdatum
04.01.2016
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Clinical Research in Cardiology / Ausgabe 7/2016
Print ISSN: 1861-0684
Elektronische ISSN: 1861-0692
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00392-015-0955-8

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