Increased Sympathetic Outflow in Cirrhosis and Ascites: Direct Evidence from Intraneural Recordings

Abstract

Objective: To determine if central sympathetic outflow is increased in patients with cirrhosis and ascites.

Patients: Eleven patients with cirrhosis and ascites, 8 patients with cirrhosis but without ascites, and 7 age-matched and 8 young healthy volunteers.

Methods: With subjects supine, direct microneurographic recordings of efferent post-ganglionic muscle sympathetic nerve activity were obtained from the peroneal nerve, and sympathetic burst frequency was compared with subjects' blood pressure, heart rate, sodium excretion, catecholamines, and plasma renin activity. All patients with cirrhosis were studied at least 5 days after withdrawal from all medications and after 7 days of a 20 mmol/d sodium, 1-L fluid-restricted diet. Age-matched volunteers were studied after 7 days of 20 mmol/d sodium intake and young healthy volunteers after 7 days of 150 mmol/d sodium intake.

Results: Sympathetic nerve activity in ascitic patients (65 ± 15 bursts/min; mean ± SD) was markedly increased, whether compared with patients with cirrhosis but without ascites (34 ± 16 bursts/min; P < 0.001), age-matched healthy volunteers on similar sodium intake (27 ± 22 bursts/min; P < 0.001), or young healthy subjects (21 ± 10 bursts/min; P < 0.001). The frequency of muscle sympathetic nerve discharge was directly related to plasma norepinephrine and epinephrine concentrations, plasma renin activity, and heart rate, all of which were increased in those patients with cirrhosis and ascites, and inversely related to 24-hour urinary sodium excretion, the fractional excretion of sodium, and subjects' pulse pressures. Sympathetic nerve activity fell from 78 to 6 bursts/min in one patient after liver transplantation.

Conclusions: This study provides the first direct evidence that elevated plasma norepinephrine concentrations in patients with cirrhosis and ascites are due to increased central sympathetic outflow. Sympathetic nerve activity is not increased in patients with cirrhosis but without ascites. Because there were direct positive correlations of sympathetic nerve activity with plasma norepinephrine concentrations, plasma epinephrine concentrations, plasma renin activity, and heart rate, the increase in central sympathetic outflow in patients with cirrhosis and ascites appears generalized and not restricted to muscle nerves. The anti-natriuretic effects of parallel increases in renal and muscle sympathetic nerve activity could account for the inverse correlation between muscle sympathetic nerve activity and sodium excretion.

Article and Author Information

  • From Toronto General Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario. For current author addresses, see end of text.

  • Grant Support: By the Medical Research Council of Canada (MT9721), the Canadian Kidney Foundation and the P.S.I. Foundation of Ontario. Dr. Floras is the recipient of a Career Scientist Award of the Ministry of Health of the Province of Ontario. Dr. Legault is a Fellow of the Canadian Kidney Foundation. Dr. Morali is funded by an American Physician's Fellowship and is a Fellow of the Schiff Foundation. Dr. Hara is a Pettit Fellow of the University of Toronto.

  • Requests for Reprints: John S. Floras, MD, DPhil, Division of Cardiology, Toronto General Hospital, 12 EN-234, 200 Elizabeth Street, Toronto, Ontario M5G 2C4.

  • Current Author Addresses: Drs. Floras and Hara: Division of Cardiology, Toronto General Hospital, 12 EN-234, 200 Elizabeth Street, Toronto, Ontario M5G 2C4.

    Dr. Legault: Hôpital Saint Luc, 1058 Rue St.-Denis, Montreal, Quebec H2X 3J4.

    Drs. Morali and Blendis: Toronto General Hospital, 9 EN-223, 200 Elizabeth Street, Toronto, Ontario M5G 2C4.

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