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Peripheral chemoreceptors and baroreceptors are located in close proximity in the carotid artery wall at the level of the carotid bifurcation. Baroreceptor stimulation lowers sympathetic activity and blood pressure. In contrast, chemoreceptor stimulation raises sympathetic activity and blood pressure. Thus, beneficial effects of electrical carotid sinus stimulation on blood pressure could be diminished by chemoreceptor overactivity and/or concomitant chemoreceptor activation through the device. Therefore, our study will assess baroreflex/chemoreflex interactions in patients with resistant hypertension equipped with carotid sinus stimulators. The study will inform us of potential additional anti-hypertensive benefits of simultaneous chemoreceptor denervation during electrode placement. Furthermore, the results may provide information about suitable electrode design to spare co-activation of peripheral chemoreceptors. Taken together, the study will help develop strategies for improving responder rate and efficacy of carotid sinus stimulators in patients with resistant hypertension.
Patients with implanted devices for electrical baroreflex stimulation are recruited according to inclusion and exclusion criteria until good quality recordings have been obtained in 10 out of maximally 15 patients. After obtaining written informed consent patients will be investigated in the laboratory on one day. In up to 20% of the patients we may fail to find an appropriate nerve recording position. In these cases we will ask the patient to repeat the experiment. Patients will be investigated in the post-absorptive state after emptying their bladder. During instrumentation and measurements they will rest in supine position. We will fix chest electrodes for ECG and impedance cardiography. A peripheral venous catheter will be introduced for later dopamine infusion. Cuffs will be used at the upper arm and the finger in order to monitor blood pressure and to allow for pulse-contour analysis. Finally, we will search for a suitable nerve recording position in the peroneal nerve for recordings of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA, postganglionic vasoconstrictor sympathetic drive). All bioelectric signals will be recorded continuously for the duration of the experiments. After the preparations baseline recordings will be performed. Subsequently, the electrical baroreflex stimulator is switched OFF and ON repeatedly (toggling) under normoxic conditions. Every OFF and ON state will last for 4 minutes. Oscillometric blood-pressure readings are taken every two minutes so as to acquire two readings per stimulation period. Toggling under normoxia is meant to ensure that the patient is a responder at the experimental day and to rule out that the blood pressure rises are too high off stimulation (safety concern). Afterwards, the breathing gas will be changed in order to have the patient inhale a hypoxic or hyperoxic mixture in a blinded manner. After reaching a stable ventilatory and autonomic state, stimulator toggling and blood-pressure measurements will be repeated. The same procedures will take place after establishing the opposite oxygenation state. Stimulation will be ON in between the oxygen states implying that the first switches will be OFF switches with all oxygenation conditions. Afterwards, the last oxygenation state will be maintained and additional low-dose dopamine infusion will be applied. Again, the electrical baroreflex stimulator will be switched off and on repeatedly and blood-pressure readings are taken. During the last two stimulator toggling states of each oxygenation level, venous blood samples are drawn for hormone measurements and inert gas rebreathing will take place for cardiac output determination. Finally, the correct positioning of the microneurography electrode is checked again. The duration of such an experiment depends on the time needed to find the sympathetic nerve bundles before the measurements and during the experiment, in case the recording position gets lost. However, experiments will rarely exceed 5 hours in total.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Hannover Medical School
Hanover, LSX, Germany
Start Date
November 1, 2015
Primary Completion Date
December 1, 2017
Completion Date
December 1, 2017
Last Updated
January 9, 2018
11
ACTUAL participants
Hypoxia without dopamine
OTHER
Hypoxia with dopamine
OTHER
Hyperoxia without dopamine
OTHER
Hyperoxia with dopamine
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
Hannover Medical School
Collaborators
NCT06518915
NCT03757377
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
Neither the United States Government nor Clareo Health make any warranties regarding the data. Check ClinicalTrials.gov frequently for updates.
View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT02623036