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Causes and Consequences of Increased Sympathetic Activity in Renal Disease

 

作者: Jaap Joles,   Hein Koomans,  

 

期刊: Hypertension: Journal of The American Heart Association  (OVID Available online 2004)
卷期: Volume 43, issue 4  

页码: 699-706

 

ISSN:0194-911X

 

年代: 2004

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: renal disease;antihypertensive agents;hypertension;diabetic nephropathy;sympathetic nervous system

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Abstract—Much evidence indicates increased sympathetic nervous activity (SNA) in renal disease. Renal ischemia is probably a primary event leading to increased SNA. Increased SNA often occurs in association with hypertension. However, the deleterious effect of increased SNA on the diseased kidney is not only caused by hypertension. Another characteristic of renal disease is unbalanced nitric oxide (NO) and angiotensin (Ang) activity. Increased SNA in renal disease may be sustained because a state of NO–Ang II unbalance is also present in the hypothalamus. Very few studies have directly compared the efficacy of adrenergic blockade with other renoprotective measures. Third-generation &bgr;-blockers seem to have more protective effects than traditional &bgr;-blockers, possibly via stimulation of NO release. Although it has been extensively documented that muscle SNA is increased in chronic renal failure, data on renal SNA and cardiac SNA are not available for these patients before end-stage renal disease. It is also unknown whether additional treatment with third-generation &bgr;-blockers can delay the progression of renal injury and prevent cardiac injury in chronic renal failure more efficiently than conventional treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors only.

 

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