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1 Department of Neurology, New York University, New York, New York 10016; and 2 University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, D-91023 Erlangen, Germany
In familial dysautonomia (FD), i.e.,
Riley-Day syndrome, parasympathetic dysfunction has not been
sufficiently evaluated. The cold face test is a noninvasive method of
activating trigeminal brain stem cardiovagal and sympathetic pathways
and can be performed in patients with limited cooperation. We performed
cold face tests in 11 FD patients and 15 controls. For 60 s, cold
compresses (0-1°C) were applied to the cheeks and forehead
while we monitored heart rate, respiration, beat-to-beat radial artery
blood pressure, and laser-Doppler skin blood flow at the first toe
pulp. From these measurements heart rate variability parameters were
calculated: root mean square of successive differences (RMSSD),
coefficient of variation (CV), low- and high-frequency (LF and HF,
respectively) power spectra of the electrocardiogram, and the LF
transfer function gain between blood pressure and heart rate. All
patients perceived cold stimulation and acknowledged discomfort. In
controls, heart rate and skin blood flow decreased significantly during
cold face test; in patients, both parameters decreased only briefly and not significantly. In controls, blood pressure, RMSSD, CV, and heart
rate HF-power spectra increased but remained unchanged in patients.
Respiration, as well as heart rate LF power spectra, did not change in
either group. In controls, LF transfer function gain between blood
pressure and heart rate indicated that bradycardia was not secondary to
blood pressure increase. We conclude that the cold face test
demonstrated that patients with FD have a reduced cardiac
parasympathetic response, which implies efferent parasympathetic dysfunction.
hereditary sensory neuropathy; autonomic neuropathy; Riley-Day syndrome; trigeminal brain stem vagal pathways; parasympathetic cardiac dysfunction; sympathetic dysfunction
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