Compliance and reactivity of the peripheral venous system in chronic intermittent hemodialysis

1992 
Compliance and reactivity of the peripheral venous system in chronic intermittent hemodialysis. A reduced venous compliance and/or inadequate venoconstriction could impair hemodynamics during hemodialysis. Therefore, compliance and reactivity of the peripheral venous system were assessed in hemodialysis patients and controls using strain gauge plethysmography. Reactivity of the venous system towards an efferent sympathetic stimulus was assessed using a cold pressor test. Results showed that venous compliance was reduced in hypertensive hemodialysis patients compared to normotensive dialysis patients (P = 0.013) and normotensive controls (P = 0.004). After one dosage with a directly acting venodilator (nitroglycerin 5mg s.l.) and 3 days of treatment with an α1-sympathicolytic agent (Doxazosin 2mg), venous compliance remained unaltered in hypertensive dialysis patients. During the cold pressor test, the blood pressure response, rise in noradrenaline levels and decline in venous compliance were normal in hemodialysis patients. However, their response to the Valsalva manoeuver was significantly impaired (P = 0.011) compared to healthy controls. We conclude that hypertension, not renal failure, causes the reduction of peripheral venous compliance in hemodialysis patients, for which structural factors might be responsible. Despite the existence of autonomous neuropathy, the reaction of the peripheral venous system towards an efferent sympathetic stimulus is intact in hemodialysis patients.
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