4.5 Article

Cold pressor test demonstrates residual sympathetic cardiovascular activation in familial dysautonomia

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 196, Issue 1-2, Pages 81-89

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0022-510X(02)00029-1

Keywords

hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy; Riley-Day-syndrome; cold pressor test; sympathetic dysfunction; pain perception

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In familial dysautonomia (1713), i.e. Riley-Day-syndrome, sympathetic cardiovascular function, as well as afferent temperature and pain mediating neurons, are significantly reduced. Thus, it was questioned if cold pressor test (CPT), which normally enhances sympathetic outflow and induces peripheral vasoconstriction by the activation of thermo- and nociceptive system activation, could be used to assess sympathetic function in FD. To evaluate whether CPT can be used to assess sympathetic activation in FD, we performed CPT in 15 FD patients and IS controls. After a 35-min resting period, participants immersed their right hand and arm up to the elbow into 0-1 degreesC cold water while we monitored heart rate (HR), respiration, beat-to-beat radial artery blood pressure (BP), and laser Doppler skin blood flow (SBF) at the right index finger pulp. From these measurements, heart rate variability parameters were calculated: root mean square of successive differences (RMSSD), coefficient of variation (CV), low and high frequency (LF, HF) power spectra of the electrocardiogram (ECG). All participants perceived cold stimulation and indicated discomfort. In controls, SBF decreased and HR and BP increased rapidly upon CPT. After 60 s, SBF indicated secondary vasodilatation in six controls, BP rise attenuated and HR returned to baseline in all controls. In the patients, SBF remained unchanged, HR and BP increased significantly, but after 50-60 s of CPT and changes were lower than in controls (p<0.05). RMSSD and CV decreased and LF increased significantly only in the controls. We conclude that CPT activates sympathetic HR and BP modulation despite impaired pain and temperature perception in FD patients. BP increase in the presence of almost unchanged SBF might be due to HR increase and to nociceptive arousal and emotionally induced catecholamine release as seen in emotional crises of FD patients. CPT assesses sympathetic cardiovascular responses independently from baroreflex function, which is compromised in FD. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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