Operation that ‘cures high BP’

December 27, 2009 07:56 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 07:06 am IST - London

Called renal sympathetic-nerve ablation, the procedure apparently disrupts signals from the brain that help keep blood pressure raised. A File Photo of an automatic digital wrist blood pressure monitor. Photo: S. Siva Saravanan

Called renal sympathetic-nerve ablation, the procedure apparently disrupts signals from the brain that help keep blood pressure raised. A File Photo of an automatic digital wrist blood pressure monitor. Photo: S. Siva Saravanan

Doctors in Britain have carried out a one-hour operation that could cure high blood pressure, it has been revealed.

Called renal sympathetic-nerve ablation, the procedure apparently disrupts signals from the brain that help keep blood pressure raised.

The procedure involves inserting a wire into a blood vessel close to the kidneys to burn through nerves which carry signals that stimulate high blood pressure.

Anthony Henry, 68, was the man on whom the operation was carried out, reports The Scotsman.

His blood pressure reportedly came down after just two weeks.

Professor Martin Rothman, who led the surgical team at the London Chest hospital, said, “This relatively trivial procedure has the potential to make a serious improvement to the quality of life for the patient.

“It is very efficient and can lower the blood pressure enough to reduce stroke mortality by 50 per cent.”

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