Abstract

Studies indicate that centrally mediated rhythms in sympathetic tone play a prominent role in diurnal cardiovascular variability. Recent evidence from heart transplant recipients, in whom blood pressure does not decline during sleep despite normal variability in plasma norepinephrine, however, suggests that afferent cardiac nervous traffic is necessary for the generation of diurnal variability. This implies that in the presence of an innervated heart excluded from the systemic circulation, blood pressure would still decrease during sleep. To assess this hypothesis, we studied 24-hour blood pressure, heart rate, and neuroendocrine variability in patients with biventricular assist devices in whom the retained native hearts had ceased to pump. Eight patients were free of medication and were studied every 3 hours. Pump rates and output were kept constant throughout the study. Blood pressure showed a significant decline during sleep, as did norepinephrine and epinephrine (all P < .05). Atrial natriuretic factor showed a significant increase around midnight (P < .01). Significantly elevated levels were found for all hormones studied except for aldosterone and endothelin. Our results suggest that diurnal variations in cardiac function or in catecholamine levels (indicative of sympathetic activity) as found in cardiac transplant recipients alone are not responsible or sufficient for producing a nocturnal drop in blood pressure. The presence of an innervated heart appears crucial in this respect. This could be of importance for the understanding of circadian cardiovascular pathophysiology.

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