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Annals of Internal Medicine
5 September 2000 Volume 133 Number 5

Cardiac Sympathetic Denervation in Parkinson Disease

David S. Goldstein, MD, PhD; Courtney Holmes, CMT; Sheng-Ting Li, MD; Simon
Bruce, MD; Leo Verhagen Metman, MD; and Richard O. Cannon, MD

Pages 338-347

Background:  In Parkinson disease, orthostatic hypotension can result from
L-dopa treatment or from sympathetic neurocirculatory failure. The latter is
detected by abnormal blood pressure responses to the Valsalva maneuver and
can be associated with loss of functional cardiac sympathetic nerve
terminals.

Objective:  To determine the frequency of cardiac sympathetic denervation in
Parkinson disease, with or without sympathetic neurocirculatory failure, and
its association with disease duration, severity, and L-dopa treatment.

Design:  Intergroup comparisons in resting patients.

Setting:  National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, Bethesda, Maryland.

Patients:  29 patients with Parkinson disease (9 with sympathetic
neurocirculatory failure, 10 who had stopped receiving or had never been
treated with L-dopa), 24 patients with multiple-system atrophy (17 with
sympathetic neurocirculatory failure, 8 receiving L-dopa), 7 patients with
pure autonomic failure, 33 controls with episodic or persistent orthostatic
intolerance without sympathetic neurocirculatory failure, and 19 normal
volunteers.

Measurements:  Beat-to-beat blood pressure responses to the Valsalva
maneuver, interventricular septal 6-[18 F]fluorodopamine-derived
radioactivity, cardiac extraction fraction of [3 H]norepinephrine,
appearance rate of norepinephrine in coronary sinus plasma (cardiac
norepinephrine spillover) and venous-arterial differences in levels of
dihydroxyphenylglycol (DHPG) and endogenous L-dopa.

Results:  Of the 29 patients with Parkinson disease, 9 with sympathetic
neurocirculatory failure and 11 without had low septal 6-[18
F]fluorodopamine-derived radioactivity (2861  453 Bq/mL per MBq/kg and 5217
525 Bq/mL per MBq/kg, respectively). All 6 patients with Parkinson disease
and decreased 6-[18 F]fluorodopamine-derived radioactivity who underwent
right-heart catheterization had a decreased cardiac extraction fraction of
[3 H]norepinephrine and virtually no cardiac norepinephrine spillover or
venous-arterial increments in plasma levels of DHPG and L-dopa. Sympathetic
neurocirculatory failure and decreased 6-[18 F]fluorodopamine-derived
radioactivity were unrelated to disease duration, disease severity, or
L-dopa treatment.

Conclusions:  Many patients with Parkinson diseaseincluding all those with
sympathetic neurocirculatory failurehave evidence of cardiac sympathetic
denervation. This suggests that loss of catecholamine innervation in
Parkinson disease occurs in the nigrostriatal system in the brain and in the
sympathetic nervous system in the heart.

Copyright ©2000 American College of Physicians – American Society of
Internal Medicine