Abstract

Background: The maintenance and development of hypertension are fundamentally dependent on renal sympathetic hyperactivity. Through regulation of the renal sympathetic nerves, catheter-based renal sympathetic denervation has been demonstrated to dramatically lower blood pressure (BP) in patients with resistant hypertension (systolic blood pressure 160 mm Hg on three or more antihypertensive medicines, including a diuretic). This study assessed a catheter-based ultrasound device of the next generation intended to maximize nerve coverage using circumferential ultrasound energy. This study's objective is to describe the results of renal denervation (RDN) in patients with resistant hypertension using a catheter-based ultrasonography device to measure blood pressure and safety. A potential new non-pharmacological therapy for resistant hypertension is renal denervation. Method: PubMed, Web of Science, Science Direct, Cochrane Library, and Google Scholar were thoroughly searched for relevant material. Throughout this meticulous process, the Rayyan QRCI was used. Results: our review included 10 studies with parameters including the period of study, age range of patients, office blood pressure, ambulatory blood pressure and the used approach. Clinical studies are required to determine whether this method is effective in treating this resistant hypertension. Conclusion: In individuals with resistant hypertension, catheter-based ultrasound renal denervation significantly and persistently lowers blood pressure and has no negative effects on renal function or renal artery anatomy.

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