Tuesday, December 18, 2012

New Procedure May Aid Stubborn High Blood Pressure

ByBrenda Goodman, MA
WebMD Health News Reviewed byLaura J. Martin, MD blood pressure gauge

Dec. 18, 2012 -- People who can’t get their high blood pressure down with drugs may be helped by a new procedure that deactivates overactive nerves in the kidneys, a small study shows.

The procedure is already available in Europe and other countries. It’s being tested in the U.S.

It’s meant to treat people with a severe type of high blood pressure that’s difficult to control, even with multiple medications. People who develop this condition, which is called resistant hypertension, are at higher than average risks for strokes, heart attacks, kidney disease, and heart failure. Resistant hypertension affects about 1 in 11 people who have high blood pressure.

“We all have these patients. They’re very thin. They exercise. They eat right. They’re on four medications and it’s still very difficult to control their blood pressure,” says Varinder Singh, MD, chairman of cardiology at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

“In those patients, you’re looking for another treatment method,” says Singh, who was not involved in the research. “I look forward to having this.”

The procedure is done under local anesthesia. Doctors make a small incision in an artery near the groin and use it to thread a catheter up to the kidneys. A machine then fires short bursts of radio waves to deaden the sympathetic nerves.

“The sympathetic nerves are the stimulant nerves of the kidneys. They are commonly activated in [high blood pressure],” says researcher Murray Esler, MD, PhD, professor and senior director of the Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, Australia.

When the nerves are overactive, they cause the body to retain too much sodium. Too much sodium drives up blood pressure, Esler says.

Testing the New Procedure

The new study is a continuation of a trial that assigned 106 patients to receive either the new procedure or usual care.

People were enrolled in the study if they were on at least three medications for high blood pressure and had a baseline systolic blood pressure, the top number, over 160, or over 150 if they had diabetes. Most continued to struggle with high blood pressure, despite taking an average of five different medications. 

At the end of six months, people who got the new procedure, which is called renal denervation, saw their blood pressure drop from an average of 178/97 to 143/85, while people who continued getting usual care actually saw their high blood pressure climb slightly.

For the second phase of the study, researchers asked members of the comparison group if they wanted to try the new procedure. Most did. 

Their results were similar to those of patients in the first treatment group. The majority of patients saw their blood pressure drop by at least 10 points. Average reductions for the group were even bigger, about 20 to 30 points for systolic blood pressure, the top number. Diastolic blood pressure, the bottom number, was also lowered significantly.

But most people didn’t see their blood pressures return to normal levels. Normal blood pressure is considered to be less than120/80.

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