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. 2011 Nov;29(11):2176-80.
doi: 10.1097/HJH.0b013e32834ae3c7.

Atorvastatin reduces sympathetic activity in patients with chronic kidney disease

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Atorvastatin reduces sympathetic activity in patients with chronic kidney disease

Laima Siddiqi et al. J Hypertens. 2011 Nov.

Abstract

Background: Hypertensive chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients often have sympathetic hyperactivity, which appears to contribute to the pathogenesis of hypertension and cardiovascular organ damage. Experimental studies and some clinical studies have shown that statin therapy can reduce central sympathetic activity. Blockade of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), which is standard treatment for CKD, is known to lower sympathetic activity. We hypothesized that adding a statin for 6 weeks to RAS blockade would further lower sympathetic activity in hypertensive stage 2-4 CKD patients.

Methods: In 10 stable CKD patients (eight men, aged 45 ± 11 years, estimated glomerular filtration rate 56 ± 22 ml/min per 1.73 m2), who were on chronic treatment with aliskiren 300 mg, blood pressure and sympathetic activity (quantified by assessment of muscle sympathetic nerve activity, MSNA) were assessed at baseline and 6 weeks after atorvastatin 20 mg/day was added. Ten other CKD patients served as time control and were studied twice with an interval of 6 weeks without any change in medication, to quantify within participant reproducibility.

Results: Mean arterial blood pressure remained stable throughout the study (93 ± 5 versus 94 ± 5 mmHg). MSNA was reduced from 28 ± 8 to 20 ± 6 bursts/min (P = 0.01), while heart rate remained stable during the study. In the control CKD group, MSNA did not change: 26 ± 5 to 25 ± 6 bursts/min. Atorvastatin reduced total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol.

Conclusion: Atorvastatin has a further sympatholytic effect in CKD patients, who are on chronic aliskiren, which is independent of blood pressure and heart rate.

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