Journal article
The Association between Extracellular Fluid Volume and Sympathetic Nervous System Activity in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease
American journal of physiology. Renal physiology, Vol.330(2), pp.F199-F209
02/01/2026
DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00380.2025
PMCID: PMC12949676
PMID: 41432718
Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with hypervolemia and sympathetic nervous system (SNS) overactivity that both contribute to heightened cardiovascular risk. Classically, extracellular fluid volume (ECFV) is inversely related to SNS activity whereby increased ECFV suppresses SNS activation. However, ECFV and SNS activity could be concomitantly elevated if there is failure to suppress SNS activity or if SNS activity plays a contributory role in ECFV expansion. Therefore, we examined the clinical determinants of increased ECFV, the association between ECFV and SNS activity and whether kidney function accounts for this relationship in CKD.
In this cross-sectional study, patients with stage II-IV CKD (62 ± 12 yr, 67% men, 90% with hypertension, N=104) underwent an assessment of ECFV via extracellular water/total body water ratio, using multifrequency bioimpedance, and a subset had SNS activity via muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA, N=39). We examined linear associations between ECFV and clinical factors, including MSNA, and group comparisons of MSNA across ECFV tertiles. Multivariable regression analyses were used to assess the relative contribution of kidney function [i.e., estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)] and MSNA to ECFV.
ECFV was inversely associated with eGFR and positively associated with age, systolic blood pressure, and pulse pressure (p<0.05 for all). MSNA was different across ECFV tertiles (p=0.009), with higher MSNA in Tertiles 2 and 3 compared to Tertile 1 (41 ± 14 and 35 ± 12 versus 26 ± 9 bursts/min, p=0.002 and 0.081, respectively), even after adjusting for eGFR, age, sex, and antihypertensive medications. MSNA (r= -0.376, p=0.018) was inversely associated with eGFR. In multivariable models, eGFR remained a significant predictor of ECFV (β = -0.341, p=0.045), while MSNA showed no independent association with ECFV (β = 0.124, p=0.457)
An inverse relationship between ECFV and SNS activity is not observed in stage II-IV CKD; rather, MSNA is higher in patients with higher ECFV. These findings suggest that the sympathoexcitatory effects of reduced kidney function may override the sympathoinhibitory effects of increased ECFV in CKD.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- The Association between Extracellular Fluid Volume and Sympathetic Nervous System Activity in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease
- Creators
- Jinhee Jeong - Emory UniversityKanokwan Bunsawat - University of IowaJeann L Sabino-Carvalho - Emory UniversityMatias G Zanuzzi - Emory UniversityElsa Mekonnen - Emory UniversityMelissa McGranahan - Emory UniversityFatima Kamal - Emory UniversityDana R DaCosta - Emory UniversityDeirdre Dixon - Emory UniversityIris Lee - Emory UniversityXiangqin Cui - Emory UniversityJeanie Park - Emory University
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- American journal of physiology. Renal physiology, Vol.330(2), pp.F199-F209
- DOI
- 10.1152/ajprenal.00380.2025
- PMID
- 41432718
- PMCID
- PMC12949676
- NLM abbreviation
- Am J Physiol Renal Physiol
- ISSN
- 1522-1466
- eISSN
- 1522-1466
- Publisher
- American Physiological Society
- Grant note
- K01DK137620 / HHS | NIH | NIDDK | Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases (DEM) R61AT10457 / HHS | NIH | National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (OAM) Merit I01CX001065 / U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) R01HL135183 / HHS | NIH | NHLBI | Division of Intramural Research (DIR)
- Language
- English
- Electronic publication date
- 12/23/2025
- Date published
- 02/01/2026
- Academic Unit
- Health, Sport, and Human Physiology
- Record Identifier
- 9985093795102771
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