Literature DB >> 2013143

Evidence for structural sympathetic reinnervation after orthotopic cardiac transplantation in humans.

R F Wilson1, B V Christensen, M T Olivari, A Simon, C W White, D D Laxson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiac transplantation (CT) causes total cardiac denervation. METHODS AND
RESULTS: To test directly for sympathetic reinnervation in humans, we measured the cardiac release of norepinephrine (NE) in response to tyramine (an agent that causes NE release from intact sympathetic nerve terminals) and sustained handgrip exercise (a reflex sympathetic stimulus) in 12 patients less than 5 months after CT, in 50 patients 1 year or more after CT, and in eight patients without CT. Plasma [NE] was measured in the aorta [( NE]Ao) and coronary sinus [( NE]CS) at rest, after tyramine administration (55 micrograms/kg, i.v.), and during sustained handgrip exercise. Cardiac NE release was determined by subtracting [NE]Ao from [NE]CS [( NE]CS-Ao). NE release was defined as [NE]CS-Ao during the intervention-[NE]CS-Ao at rest (delta [NE]CS-Ao). In patients studied within 5 months of CT, no significant NE release occurred after tyramine administration (delta [NE]CS-Ao, 33 +/- 18 pg/ml; range, -98 to 117 pg/ml) or handgrip exercise (delta [NE]CS-Ao, -34 +/- 10 pg/ml; range, -46 to 8 pg/ml; n = 10). Conversely, in 39 of 50 patients studied 1 year or more after CT, tyramine administration caused a significant cardiac NE release (delta [NE]CS-Ao, 500 +/- 59 pg/ml; range, -11 to 1,918 pg/ml), and handgrip exercise caused a significant NE release in 17 of 41 patients (delta [NE]CS-Ao, 189 +/- 34 pg/ml; range, -211 to 949 pg/ml). In normally innervated patients, tyramine caused an even larger NE release (delta [NE]Ao-CS, 1,943 +/- 210 pg/ml; range, 1,152 to 2,977 pg/ml), and handgrip exercise caused a significant NE release in two of seven patients (delta [NE]CS-Ao, 143 +/- 51 pg/ml; range, -15 to 338 pg/ml).
CONCLUSIONS: Early after CT, neither tyramine nor handgrip exercise caused a significant cardiac release of NE, suggesting sympathetic denervation. Late after CT, most patients had a significant, but subnormal, NE release in response to pharmacological or reflex stimuli, suggesting that limited sympathetic reinnervation occurs in most patients after orthotopic CT.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 2013143     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.83.4.1210

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  38 in total

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3.  Sympathetic reinnervation and heart rate variability after cardiac transplantation.

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5.  Neostigmine-induced bradycardia following recent vs remote cardiac transplantation in the same patient.

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Authors:  S B Backman; G S Fox; R D Stein; F E Ralley
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Review 7.  Exercise following heart transplantation.

Authors:  R W Braith; D G Edwards
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8.  The place of perceived exertion ratings in exercise prescription for cardiac transplant patients before and after training.

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Review 9.  Cardiac sympathetic neuronal imaging using PET.

Authors:  Riikka Lautamäki; Dnyanesh Tipre; Frank M Bengel
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 9.236

10.  Sympathetic re-innervation after heart transplantation: dual-isotope neurotransmitter scintigraphy, norepinephrine content and histological examination.

Authors:  C Guertner; B J Krause; H Klepzig; G Herrmann; S Lelbach; E K Vockert; A Hartmann; F D Maul; T W Kranert; E Mutschler
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