Hepatic denervation in liver transplant recipients significantly attenuated the increase in plasma norepinephrine 30-40 minutes after water drinking compared to kidney transplant recipients (0.01 vs 0.21 nmol/L, p<0.05).
Observational (n=40)
No
Absolute Event Rate: 0.01% vs 0.21%
p-value: p=<0.05
UNLABELLED: Water drinking acutely increases sympathetic activity in human subjects. In animals, the response appears to be mediated through transient receptor potential channel TRPV4 activation on osmosensitive hepatic spinal afferents, described as osmopressor response. We hypothesized that hepatic denervation attenuates water drinking-induced sympathetic activation. We studied 20 liver transplant recipients (44±2.6 years, 1.2±0.1 years post transplant) as model of hepatic denervation and 20 kidney transplant recipients (43±2.6 years, 0.8±0.1 years post transplant) as immunosuppressive drug matched control group. Before and after 500 ml water ingestion, we obtained venous blood samples for catecholamine analysis. We also monitored brachial and finger blood pressure, ECG, and thoracic bioimpedance. Plasma norepinephrine concentration had changed by 0.01±0.07 nmol/l in liver and by 0.21±0.07 nmol/l in kidney transplant recipients (p<0.05 between groups) after 30-40 minutes of water drinking. While blood pressure and systemic vascular resistance increased in both groups, the responses tended to be attenuated in liver transplant recipients. Our findings support the idea that osmosensitive hepatic afferents are involved in water drinking-induced sympathetic activation in human subjects. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01237431.
May et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Hepatic Denervation (Liver Transplant Recipients) (n=40). Hepatic denervation (liver transplantation) vs. Kidney transplantation was evaluated on Change in averaged venous plasma norepinephrine concentration 30-40 minutes after water ingestion from baseline (p=<0.05). Hepatic denervation in liver transplant recipients significantly attenuated the increase in plasma norepinephrine 30-40 minutes after water drinking compared to kidney transplant recipients (0.01 vs 0.21 nmol/L, p<0.05).