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Survey Shows New Mayo Clinic Treatment For Intractable Low Blood Pressure
Public release date: 28-Apr-2004
Contact: John Murphy
[log in to unmask]
507-284-5005
Mayo Clinic

Survey shows new Mayo Clinic treatment for intractable low blood pressure

ROCHESTER, Minn. --Patients are generally pleased with a new Mayo Clinic drug treatment for a common form of impaired
nerve transmission that causes dizziness and fainting when patients change position from lying down to standing up, and
most want to continue using it.

This finding on patients' satisfaction of the new drug treatment is especially welcome because drug treatments
currently used to treat the dizziness and fainting related to orthostatic hypotension are not free of side effects. The
most dangerous side effect of these treatments is increased stress on the heart and increased risk of stroke from high
blood pressure when the patient is lying down.

Mayo Clinic's treatment includes the drug called pyridostigmine (pi-rid-o-STIG-mine), which is commonly used to treat
myasthenia gravis, a disorder of the neuromuscular junction resulting in easy fatigability and muscle weakness.
Pyridostigmine does not put extra stress on the heart when patients lie down, thus making it a safe treatment. The
addition of patient-satisfaction data increases pyridostigmine's appeal as a possible improved treatment for
orthostatic hypotension. Patient satisfaction survey results will be presented by Dr. Paola Sandroni, specialist in
neurology and primary author of the study, and colleagues April 28 at the American Academy of Neurology annual meeting
in San Francisco.

The patient satisfaction data results from a Mayo Clinic follow-up survey evaluating patient impressions of
pyridostigmine. The goal of the drug treatment is to stop the dizziness, light-headedness and fainting that patients
experience who suffer from autonomic failure, a common form of impaired nerve transmission which causes orthostatic
hypotension. This failure of autonomic nerve function leads to the sudden drop in blood pressure that causes dizziness,
fainting or falling. It can be a frequent side effect of Parkinson's disease, diabetes, chronic alcohol abuse and other
conditions. Low blood pressure occurs when a patient suddenly changes body position, from lying down to standing up.

Significance of the Mayo Clinic Finding

Treatment options for orthostatic hypotension are limited because of side effects produced. Most worrisome is their
tendency to cause high blood pressure when the patient lies down.

"Using pyridostigmine increases nerve transmission mainly when the patient stands up and not while the patient is lying
down. Hence it improves standing blood pressure without increasing blood pressure when the patient is lying down," says
Dr. Sandroni. "This is a big advantage to this treatment, because for the first time, we can offer control of dizziness
and fainting without causing a further problem."

About the Mayo Clinic Study

To evaluate patient satisfaction, researchers contacted 29 patients by telephone and questioned them in a structured
interview. All had previously participated in a well-controlled study to evaluate pyridostigmine's effectiveness and
continued with the drug. Researchers asked specifically about patients' current symptoms of orthostatic hypotension,
including gastrointestinal side effects, and their overall satisfaction with pyridostigmine. Twenty were still taking
the drug at the time of the phone interview, and had been for about 19 months. Some took it in combination with other
drugs.

Seventeen of the 20 taking pyridostigmine were extremely satisfied with its effects. Nine patients had stopped taking
the drug, mostly because they found it wasn't helpful.

The average age of the patients was 61. Causes of their low blood pressure ranged from general weakening of various
physical systems due to age to unspecified failure of the autonomic system, to damage to the autonomic system due to
autoimmune disease.

Researchers are encouraged by the results of this follow-up study because it provides more data about successfully
treating the disorder. They concluded that pyridostigmine is, overall, well tolerated and can be effective for patients
with neurogenic hypotension, as indicated by improvement in symptoms and their desire to continue with the drug.

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Background: The Problem of Low Blood Pressure with Posture Change

The change of the body from the lying-down, horizontal position to the standing-up, vertical position is performed
effortlessly by most people. The body automatically accommodates this position change by quickly moving most of the
blood that needs to be transferred from the chest to the blood vessels of the lower trunk. It does this by speeding up
the heart rate and adjusting vessel tension. The remainder of the blood is transferred within three to five minutes.
But in patients who have suffered damage to the autonomic nervous system that maintains normal blood pressure, these
compensatory pumping and vessel-stress adjustments are not made.

Mayo Clinic: Pioneer in Treatment

The Mayo Clinic pioneered the diagnosis and advanced treatment of autonomic nerve function disorder in 1983 when
Phillip Low, M.D., director of the Mayo Autonomic Disorders Project, designed the first laboratory and a comprehensive
series of tests for evaluating patients with this disorder. As the first program for autonomic disorders to be funded
by the National Institutes of Health, it is currently running three NIH studies.

John Murphy
507-284-5005 (days)
507-284-2511 (evenings)
e-mail: [log in to unmask]

SOURCE: EurekAlert, DC
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-04/mc-ssn042604.php

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