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About
Background:
The autonomic nervous system controls automatic body functions. Researchers want to improve the tests used to diagnose autonomic failure. Orthostatic hypertension is a drop in blood pressure when a person stands up. Researchers want to focus on this sign of autonomic failure.
Objective:
To improve testing for conditions that cause autonomic nervous system failure.
Eligibility:
People ages 18 and older in one of these categories:
Design:
All participants will be screened with:
Some participants will be screened with:
Participants may stay in the hospital for up to 1 week depending on their tests. Tests may include repeats of screening tests and:
Participants may have a visit about 2 years later to repeat tests.
Full description
Objective: In dysautonomias, altered function of one or more components of the autonomic nervous system adversely affect health. A subset of dysautonomias consists of chronic autonomic failure (CAF) syndromes. A key sign of CAF is orthostatic hypotension (OH) due to sympathetic neurocirculatory failure (neurognic OH, or nOH). Primary CAF has been classified based on clinical manifestations into three forms - pure autonomic failure (PAF), multiple system atrophy (MSA), and Parkinson's disease with OH (PD+OH). All three forms involve deposition of the protein alpha-synuclein (AS) in neurons (PD, PAF) or glial cells (MSA), and therefore are called autonomic synucleinopathies. Clinical assessment alone often is inadequate for distinguishing among these conditions in individual patients. This observational study continues and expands on Protocol 03-N-0004, "Clinical Laboratory Evaluation of Primary Chronic Autonomic Failure." The overall objective is to refine and conduct multi-modality testing of catecholaminergic and autonomic systems in patients with CAF. The goals are to: (a) improve the differential diagnosis of CAF via laboratory biomarkers; (b) track the natural history of CAF by follow-up testing; (c) apply clinical laboratory biomarkers to gain insights into underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of CAF; and (d) build up rosters of well characterized patients for future experimental therapeutic trials.
Study Population: The study population consists of patients with neurodegenerative CAF identified by on-site screening at the NIH Clinical Center. Comparison groups include control patients with iatrogenic CAF (e.g., status-post cardiac transplantation, pre/post bilateral thoracic sympathectomies) or PD without OH (PD No OH), and Healthy Volunteers (HVs). MSA patients are included, to build up a subject roster for a planned clinical trial.
Design: This is an observational pathophysiology/natural history study with a planned duration of 5 years. Descriptive statistics will be done in diagnostic groups with neurodegenerative CAF.
Outcome Measures: The study is hypothesis generating/exploratory. The primary outcome measure is results of clinical laboratory research tests. Neurobehavioral rating scales include the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), and Uniform Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS). Neurochemical data are from assays of catechols and related compounds in plasma or cerebrospinal fluid. Neuroimaging data are from 18F-DOPA, 18F-dopamine, 13N-ammonia, and 11C-methylreboxetine positron emission tomographic (PET) scanning and MRI. Immunofluorescence microscopy is used to quantify immunoreactive tyrosine hydroxylase and AS in skin biopsy samples. Correlation analyses are done among individual values for outcome measures.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Critieria: Patients referred for orthostatic hypotension. This is the main subject cohort.
If a patient has already been diagnosed as having neurodegenerative CAF under NIH Clinical Protocol 03-N-0004, this satisfies the inclusion criteria for that patient. Previous enrollment in NIH Clinical Protocol 03-N-0004 is not required for enrollment in this study. We do plan to recruit participation into this study from NIH Clinical Protocol 03-N-0004, which has been closed.
If a patient has been referred for OH, then the patient gives consent at the NIH Clinical Center (and therefore is accrued) and then has screening testing at the NIH Clinical Center to confirm that the OH is neurogenic. We anticipate that all patients referred for OH will be shown to have nOH upon screening testing at the NIH Clinical Center. At the time of screening, exclusionary abnormal laboratory test results (e.g., high serum creatinine indicating renal failure) may come to light, in which case they will be withdrawn from the study; however, the patient would have been accrued.
Inclusion criteria: Control patients with iatrogenic CAF
Inclusion criteria: Control patients with PD No OH:
Inclusion criteria: Healthy Volunteers:
NIH employees may participate. There is no direct solicitation of employees/staff by supervisors. Co-workers will not solicit co-workers. NIH employees are required to abide by NIH Policy Manual 2300-630-3, "Leave Policy for NIH Employees Participating in NIH Medical Research Studies."
EXCLUSION CRITIERIA:
Patient Group Referred for Orthostatic Hypotension
Patient Control Group with Iatrogenic CAF or PD No OH
Healthy Volunteer Group
89 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Janna Gelsomino, R.N.; David S Goldstein, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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