| Literature DB >> 23720648 |
Eva Stuebner1, Ekawat Vichayanrat, David A Low, Christopher J Mathias, Stefan Isenmann, Carl-Albrecht Haensch.
Abstract
Non-motor symptoms are now commonly recognized in Parkinson's disease (PD) and can include dysautonomia. Impairment of cardiovascular autonomic function can occur at any stage of PD but is typically prevalent in advanced stages or related to (anti-Parkinsonian) drugs and can result in atypical blood pressure (BP) readings and related symptoms such as orthostatic hypotension (OH) and supine hypertension. OH is usually diagnosed with a head-up-tilt test (HUT) or an (active) standing test (also known as Schellong test) in the laboratory, but 24 h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) in a home setting may have several advantages, such as providing an overview of symptoms in daily life alongside pathophysiology as well as assessment of treatment interventions. This, however, is only possible if ABPM is administrated correctly and an autonomic protocol (including a diary) is followed which will be discussed in this review. A 24-h ABPM does not only allow the detection of OH, if it is present, but also the assessment of cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction during and after various daily stimuli, such as postprandial and alcohol dependent hypotension, as well as exercise and drug induced hypotension. Furthermore, information about the circadian rhythm of BP and heart rate (HR) can be obtained and establish whether or not a patient has a fall of BP at night (i.e., "dipper" vs. non-"dipper"). The information about nocturnal BP may also allow the investigation or detection of disorders such as sleep dysfunction, nocturnal movement disorders, and obstructive sleep apnea, which are common in PD. Additionally, a 24-h ABPM should be conducted to examine the effectiveness of OH therapy. This review will outline the methodology of 24 h ABPM in PD, summarize findings of such studies in PD, and briefly consider common daily stimuli that might affect 24 h ABPM.Entities:
Keywords: 24 h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; Parkinson’s disease; autonomic protocol; circadian rhythm; non-dipping; non-invasive; orthostatic hypotension; supine hypertension
Year: 2013 PMID: 23720648 PMCID: PMC3654335 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2013.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Factors influencing postural (orthostatic) hypotension, adapted from Mathias et al. (.
| Speed of positional change | |
| Time of day (worse in the morning) | |
| Prolonged recumbency | |
| Warm environment (hot weather, central heating, hot bath) | |
| Raising intrathoracic pressure – micturition, defaecation, or coughing | |
| Food and alcohol ingestion | |
| Physical exertion | |
| Maneuvers and positions (bending forward, abdominal compression, leg crossing, squatting, activating calf muscle pump) | |
| Drugs with vasoactive properties (including dopaminergic agents) | |
| Low intravascular volume | |
| Blood/plasma loss | Hemorrhage, burns, hemodialysis |
| Fluid/electrolyte | Inadequate intake – anorexia nervosa |
| Fluid loss – vomiting, diarrhea, losses from ileostomy | |
| Renal/endocrine – salt-losing nephropathy, adrenal insufficiency (Addison’s disease), diabetes insipidus, diuretics | |
| Vasodilatation | Drugs – glyceryl trinitrate |
| Alcohol | |
| Heat, pyrexia | |
| Hyperbradykinism | |
| Systemic mastocytosis | |
| Extensive varicose veins | |
| Cardiac impairment | |
| Myocardial | Myocarditis |
| Impaired ventricular filling | Atrial myxoma, constrictive pericarditis |
| Impaired output | Aortic stenosis |
*These maneuvers usually reduce the postural fall in blood pressure, unlike the others.
Figure 1Blood Pressure (upper line systolic, lower line diastolic) and heart rate profiles during 24 h ABPM of a healthy individual; dipper, showing more than a 10% drop in BP at night time. Black bar indicates sleep.
Figure 3Blood Pressure (upper line systolic, lower line diastolic) and heart rate profiles during 24 h ABPM of a PD patient, non-dipper, not showing a drop (<10%) of BP at night time. Black bar indicates sleep.
Figure 4Blood Pressure (upper line systolic, lower line diastolic) and heart rate profiles during 24 h ABPM of a PD patient with a reversed BP profile. BP increases at night time in contrast to a dipper. Black bar indicates sleep.
Figure 2Blood Pressure (upper line systolic, lower line diastolic) and heart rate profiles during 24 h ABPM of a PD patient; dipper, showing more than a 10% drop in BP at night time. Black bar indicates sleep. Peaks in BP relate to agitation or increased tremor.
Chart 2Twenty-four hour ABPM monitoring flow chart for PD.
An overview of key findings 24 hr ABPM studies in PD patients.
| Study title (reference) | Type of PD | Sample size | Setting | Technique | Treatment | % Of non-dipping | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brevetti et al. ( | PD | 5 PD, 5 control | Clinical | Ambulatory intra-arterial BP measurement | Discontinued 15 days in advance | – | Mean 24 h BP was lower in PD patients than controls |
| Senard et al. ( | PD (± OH) | 19 with OH, 19 without OH | Clinical | ABPM | 94.7% (PD + OH), 31.6% (PD − OH) | Average BP at night was higher and BP variability was higher during day than night in patients with OH ( | |
| Muhl et al. ( | PD (± psychosis) | 32 | Clinical | ABPM, 15 min interval | – | Psychosis in PD is correlated with low BP at night | |
| Hakamaki et al. ( | PD (± OH) | 20 PD, 21 controls | – | Fludrocortisone | 40% (eight Patients on fludrocortisone were non-dipper) | PD patients without fludrocortisone had lower BP readings during day and night than PD on fludro | |
| Plaschke et al. ( | PD (± OH) | 13 PD, 11 PD + OH | Clinical | ABPM, 20 min interval during day, 30 min at night-time | All treatment discontinued at least 3 days prior to testing | – | Night-time BP was higher in 82% of PD + OH patients, higher supine BP in PD + OH than PD |
| Ejaz et al. ( | PD | 13 | Clinical | ABPM + Diary | Levodopa/carbidopa Selegiline Gabapentin, R-Blocker, calcium-channel-blocker | 92.3% | postprandial hypotension, nocturnal hypertension in 100% of subjects |
| Schmidt et al. ( | PD | 23 PD, 26 controls (25 PSP, 25 MSA) | Home setting | ABPM + Diary, 15 min interval during day, 30 min at night | Dopamine, dopamine antagonis, pramipexole, pergolid, Cabergoline, ropinirol e,a-dihydroergocryptine, MAO inhibitor, COMT inhibitor. Amantadine | 48% (22% reversed) | Nocturnal BP regulation was pathological in PD 48%, PSP 40%, MSA 68% vs. Control 8% |
| Sommer et al. ( | PD | 40 | Home setting | ABPM | Antihypertensives | 88% | No correlation between non-dipping and anti-hypertensive treatment; 95% of PD + OH patients were non-dipper and 79% of PD without OH |
| Oh et al. ( | Early PD (± OH) | 52 PD, 17 PD + OH | – | ABPM | Antihypertensives | 79.71% | The percentage of patients with hypertension was higher in the non-dipper group |
Chart 1Overview of possible reasons for non-dipping and how to diagnose them.