Patterns of regional sympathetic nerve traffic in preascitic and ascitic cirrhosis

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Abstract

Overactivity of the sympathetic nervous system and portal hypertension are key factors in the development of ascites in cirrhosis. The sympathoexcitation that characterizes the more advanced stages of liver diseases is less clearly defined in preascitic cirrhosis. We measured sympathetic nerve traffic to skeletal muscle (peroneal nerve) and to skin districts by microneurography in (1) 12 Child class A cirrhotic patients with clinically significant portal hypertension (portal pressure gradient > 10 mm Hg, 14.8 ± 1.2 mm Hg, mean ± SEM) but without actual or previous ascites, (2) 16 Child class C cirrhotic patients with tense ascites, and (3) 10 patients with mild congestive heart failure, a condition paradigmatic of a marked sympathetic activation. Muscle sympathetic nerve traffic was markedly increased in Child class C subjects as compared with controls (23.9 ± 1.6 bursts/min, P

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Pozzi, M., Grassi, G., Redaelli, E., Dell’Oro, R., Ratti, L., Redaelli, A., … Mancia, G. (2001). Patterns of regional sympathetic nerve traffic in preascitic and ascitic cirrhosis. Hepatology, 34(6), 1113–1118. https://doi.org/10.1053/jhep.2001.29198

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