
New brain pathway linked to hypertension could be targeted through carotid sensors
An animal study from Brazil and New Zealand implicates the lateral parafacial (pFL) brain region in some forms of high blood pressure, showing that pFL activity can link breathing patterns to sympathetic drive and vascular constriction; turning pFL on raises BP while inactivating it lowers BP in hypertensive rats. The findings suggest a neurogenic component in about half of hypertension cases and point to carotid-body–targeted therapies as a potential route to control BP without brain-penetrant drugs, though relevance to humans remains to be proven. The work also helps explain the sleep apnea–hypertension link but remains based on animal models."
