Abstract

PurposeThe aim of the study was to assess cardiac and autonomic function in patients with Crohn’s disease and explore their relation to disease duration using cardiovascular reflex tests. Materials and methodsCardiovascular parameters, baroreflex sensitivity, spectral-indices of short-term heart rate variability and blood pressure variability were compared between patients with Crohn’s disease in remission (n = 30) and a control group (n = 29). Cardiac autonomic function was assessed during response to standing (tilt) and deep breathing test (expiration/inspiration ratio-E/I). Aortic pulse wave velocity, aortic augmentation index and central systolic blood pressure were measured oscillometrically. ResultsAt rest, Crohn’s disease patients had significantly higher systolic (p = 0.03) and diastolic (p = 0.03) blood pressure, total peripheral resistance index (p = 0.003), sympathetic-parasympathetic ratio (p = 0.033) and lower baroreceptor effectiveness (p = 0.047), myocardial variables (stroke index; p = 0.03, cardiac index; p = 0.025, Heather index; p = 0.039, left ventricular ejection time; p = 0.038), as compared to controls. Orthostatic response to the tilt test in the Crohn’s disease group and the control group was similar, no intergroup differences were observed for E/I ratio and autonomic parameters. In Crohn’s disease patients, disease duration was negatively associated with baroreflex sensitivity and positively correlated with normalised high frequency heart rate variability, sympathetic-parasympathetic ratio at rest and post-tilt changes in Δsystolic blood pressure, p < 0.05. The control group had significantly lower central systolic blood pressure (p = 0.043) compared to Crohn’s disease patients. ConclusionsCrohn’s disease patients in remission have preserved cardiac and autonomic function in response to cardiovascular reflex tests with a shift in cardiovascular autonomic regulation towards sympathetic predominate in the rest position.

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