Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, Vol 12, Issue 3 519-523, Copyright © 1997 by Oxford University Press
C Zoccali, G Tripepi, F Mallamaci and V Panuccio
BACKGROUND: Hypotension during haemodialysis may be caused by the
activation of a cardiovascular reflex causing abrupt sympathetic
withdrawal, vasodilatation and bradycardia (bradycardic hypotension).
However, the frequency of this type of hypotension is undefined and it is
unclear whether or not it underlies a peculiar predisposition to
vasodepressor syncope. OBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence of bradycardic
hypotension and to test the hypothesis that dialysis patients are
predisposed to vasodepressor syncope. RESULTS: Sixty hypotensive episodes
were recorded in 20 patients (> or = 2 episodes in 15 patients). Heart
rate increased in 35 episodes, did not change in 19 episodes and decreased
in six episodes. The HR response pattern to hypotension was reproducible in
10 patients (always tachycardia, 6; always unchanged heart rate 4).
Patients developing bradycardic hypotension (n = 5) all had an erratic HR
response to hypotension (i.e. bradycardia preceded or followed by
tachycardia or by no HR change) and were characterized either by the
typical haemodynamic pattern of hypovolaemia (predialysis hypotension,
tachycardia and low TBW) or by being treated with a very high UF rate (>
0.3 ml/kg/min). Post-dialysis echocardiography showed that the LVEDD was
less (one-tailed P = 0.055) in patients with bradycardic hypotension than
in those with tachycardic responses or with unchanged HR. On tilt testing
(after dialysis) three of 11 (27%) dialysis hypotensive patients developed
bradycardic hypotension. This proportion was identical to that expected in
healthy subjects and in control patients without syncope. CONCLUSIONS:
Tachycardia is the more frequent heart rate response to dialysis
hypotension in uraemic patients. Bradycardic hypotension in dialysis
patients is associated with a haemodynamic profile indicating a more severe
degree of cardiovascular underfilling. Bradycardic hypotension probably
represents a physiological response to hypovolaemia rather than the
expression of a peculiar predisposition to vasodepressor syncope.
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
The heart rate response pattern to dialysis hypotension in haemodialysis patients
CNR Centro di Fisiologia Clinica, Bianchi e Morelli, Reggio Cal, Italy.
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