Circadian cardiac autonomic nerve dysfunction in primary hyperparathyroidism improves after parathyroidectomy

Inga Lena Nilsson, Jan Åberg, Jonas Rastad, Lars Lind, Orlo H. Clark, Nancy D. Perrier, Collin J. Weber, Gary B. Talpos

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background. Primary hyperparathyroidism has been associated with premature death in cardiovascular diseases, but reversibility and background mechanisms are uncertain. This study investigates autonomic nervous function in hyperparathyroidism because disturbances in this respect have been related to increased cardiovascular morbidity. Methods. Twenty-one consecutive patients with hyperparathyroidism and 23 matched control subjects without interfering medication underwent electrocardiographs recordings and ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) determination during a 24-hour period. Patients were re-examined at normocalcemia 1 year after parathyroidectomy. Heart rate variability was analyzed in subjects with sinus rhythm and normal atrioventricular conduction; time domain measures were calculated from the RR-intervals, and frequency domain variables were obtained with an autoregressive algorithm, which expressed power distribution (high, low, or very low frequency). Results. Nocturnal increase in low frequency was blunted in cases versus control subjects (103 ± 128 m2 vs 430 ± 171 m2; P = .03). Very low frequency at nighttime correlated inversely with serum parathormone (r = -0.33; P < .05) and increased postoperatively (T = .03). ABP was higher both at daytime and nighttime (P < .05) in patients and remained unchanged after surgery. Systolic ABP correlated with the parathormone (r = 0.47; P < .01). Conclusion. Results suggest altered arcadian autonomic function in hyperparathyroidism that can improve after parathyroidectomy. Despite elevated blood pressure, ABP shouts retained diurnal rhythm, which indicates different pathophysiologic mechanisms behind the 2 predictors of cardiovascular death in hyperparathyroidism.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1013-1019
Number of pages7
JournalSurgery
Volume134
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2003

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

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