By: Reuters
LONDON- Scientists experimenting with rats have found that
de-activating certain nerves in the neck can effectively treat high blood
pressure—a discovery that could be an advance in tackling one of the world’s
biggest silent killers.
Researchers at Britain’s Bristol University found that in rats
with high blood pressure, when they removed nerve links between the brain and
the carotid body—a nodule about the size of a grain of rice on the side of each
carotid artery—the animals’ blood pressure fell and remained low.
The researchers’ results, published in the journal Nature
Communications on Tuesday, have already led the team on to conduct a small
human trial of the technique, with results expected at the end of this year.
Hypertension, or high blood pressure, is referred to by the World
Health Organisation as one of the world’s biggest silent killers because most
people who have it can’t feel or see it.
It affects around one in three people worldwide and can cause
stroke, heart attacks and kidney failure.
After diagnosis, treatment of high blood pressure needs to be
lifelong and many patients are able to manage their condition with
anti-hypertension drugs. But experts say that for around 1 in 50 of them,
medication does not help.
Julian Paton, who led this latest study at Bristol’s school of
physiology and pharmacology, said while scientists already knew of a link
between the carotid organs and hypertension, until now they “had absolutely no
idea that they contributed so massively to the generation of high blood
pressure.”
Tim Chico, as consultant cardiologist at the University of
Sheffield who was not directly involved in the research, described the technique
as “exciting and innovative” but cautioned that more work was needed to assess
its effectiveness and safety before it could be considered for use in patients.
Normally, Paton explained, the carotid body acts to regulate the
amount of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the blood.
It is stimulated when oxygen levels fall in the blood—such as when
someone is holding their breath. This then causes a dramatic increase in
breathing and blood pressure until blood oxygen levels are restored.
Having established that this response comes about through a nerve
connection between the carotid body and the brain, Paton’s team decided to
block the nerve endings in the neck and found that it swiftly brought their
blood pressure down.
Jeremy Pearson, associate medical director at the British Heart
Foundation, which part-funded this latest research, said all eyes are now on
the human trial aiming to find out whether the treatment might work in people
with high blood pressure who don’t get better with current drugs.
Tony
Heagerty, a professor of medicine at Manchester University who was not involved
in the study, said it was an interesting development which could “potentially
avoid the use of drugs which have to be taken on a daily basis for many years.”
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