Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01679652

The Effects of Nebivolol on the NO-system in Patients With Essential Hypertension

The Effects of Nebivolol on the NO-system in Patients With Essential

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
25 (actual)
Sponsor
Erling Bjerregaard Pedersen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Investigators want investigate the following hypothesis: 1. Nebivolol increases nitric oxide activity in the systemic circulation and the kidney 2. The increased activity of nitric oxide during nebivolol treatment can be demonstrated by inhibition of NO synthesis with L-NMMA. We expect increased responses in blood pressure and sodium excretion is expected during nebivolol treatment compared to placebo.

Detailed description

Beta-blockers are no longer recommended as first line treatment in essential hypertension. Evidence mainly based on clinical trails with the non-vasodilating beta-blockers atenolol and propanolol points towards that beta-blockers have an increased risk of stroke compared to ACE-inhibitors, calcium channel blockers and thiazides. However, this Nebivolol is a third generation beta-blocker with vasodilating properties. Nebivolol decreases peripheral blood pressure to the same extend as other beta-blockers but in contrast to atenolol nebivolol also reduces central blood pressure. Furthermore nebivolol increases nitric oxide (NO) availability in forearm vessels, maybe through activation of beta-3 receptors. The nitric oxide system plays a central role in both renal sodium and water handling and regulation of vascular tone and blood pressure. It has not been investigated if nebivolol changes NO availability in the kidney. Investigators want investigate the following hypothesis: 1. Nebivolol increases nitric oxide activity in the systemic circulation and the kidney 2. The increased activity of nitric oxide during nebivolol treatment can be demonstrated by inhibition of NO synthesis with L-NMMA. Investigators expect increased responses in blood pressure and sodium excretion is expected during nebivolol treatment compared to placebo. Purpose The purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of nebivolol on renal handling of sodium and water (Glomerular filtration rate, urine production, free water clearance, excretion of proteins from epithelial sodium channels (u-ENaCαβγ) and aquaporin channels (u-AQP2) and sodium and potassium excretion), plasma concentrations of vasoactive hormones (renin, angiotensin II, aldosterone, vasopressin, atrial natriuretic peptide, brain natriuretic peptide and endothelin), central blood pressure, pulse wave velocity (PWV) and augmentation index, under basal conditions and during inhibition of nitric oxide synthesis in patients with essential hypertension. Design 25 patients with essential hypertension are recruited in this randomised, cross over, placebo-controlled, double blinded study with two treatment periods (nebivolol/placebo). Each subject will attend to two examination days. Four days prior to each examination days and on the morning of each examination day subjects are given either nebivolol 5 mg pr. day or placebo. During treatment periods subject are given a standardized diet. On the examination days subject are given L-NMMA, a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, and renal function, central hemodynamic and vasoactive hormones are evaluated during basal conditions and during inhibition of nitric oxide synthesis. Perspectives This study is expected to contribute to increasing the knowledge about the mechanisms involved in the development and progression of cardiovascular disease. Beta-blockers are not recommended as first line treatment in essential hypertension but the results from this study may influence clinical treatment of essential hypertension in the future.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGNebivololTablet i blinded in capsula
DRUGplacebo

Timeline

Start date
2012-08-01
Primary completion
2013-09-01
Completion
2013-09-01
First posted
2012-09-06
Last updated
2014-03-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01679652. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.