Abstract-Antihypertensive treatment with dihydropyridines may be accompanied by sympathetic activation. Data on whether this is common to all compounds and similar in the various phases of treatment are not univocal, however. In 28 untreated essential hypertensives (age, 56.4Ϯ1.8 years; meanϮSEM) finger blood pressure (BP, Finapres), heart rate (HR, ECG), plasma norepinephrine (NE, high-performance liquid chromatography), and muscle sympathetic nerve traffic (MSNA, microneurography) were measured at rest and during baroreceptor manipulation (vasoactive drugs) in the placebo run-in period and after randomization to double-blind acute and chronic (8 weeks) felodipine (10 mg/d, nϭ14) or lercanidipine (10 mg/d, nϭ14). Acute administration of both drugs induced pronounced BP reductions and marked increases in HR, NE, and MSNA. After 8 weeks of treatment, BP reductions were similar to those observed after acute administration, whereas HR, NE, and MSNA responses were markedly attenuated (Ϫ7%, Ϫ32%, and Ϫ14%, respectively; PϽ0.05). There was a small residual increase in sympathetic activity in the felodipine group, whereas in the lercanidipine group, all adrenergic markers returned to baseline values. Baroreflex control of HR and MSNA was markedly impaired (Ϫ42% and Ϫ48%, respectively) after acute drug administration, with a recovery and complete resetting during chronic treatment. Thus, the sympathoexcitation induced by 2 different dihydropyridines is largely limited to the acute administration. The 2 drugs have, nevertheless, a different chronic sympathetic effect, indicating that dihydropyridines do not homogeneously affect this function. The acute sympathoexcitation, but not the small between-drugs differential chronic adrenergic effect, is accounted for by baroreflex impairment. Key Words: autonomic nervous system Ⅲ sympathetic nervous system Ⅲ baroreflex Ⅲ calcium Ⅲ hypertension, essential S everal studies have shown that the hyperadrenergic state characterizing essential hypertension (1) favors the development and progression of the hypertensive state, 1-7 (2) promotes and accelerates the occurrence of the hypertensionrelated cardiac and vascular damage, 5-9 and (3) adversely modulates metabolic cardiovascular risk factors, including insulin resistance. [3][4][5]7,10 This implies that antihypertensive treatment should be based on drugs that are capable of not only effectively reducing the elevated blood pressure (BP) but also avoiding the neuroadrenergic activation that may be reflexly triggered by the BP-lowering response. 6 -8,10 -12 The effect of calcium antagonists of the dihydropyridine class on sympathetic cardiovascular drive has been investigated in a number of studies that have produced, however, different results (ie, an increase, no change, or even a decrease in sympathetic activity). [13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] This could be due to the different pharmacokinetic and/or pharmacodynamic properties of the drugs examined. 21 It could also be accounted for, however, by the different characteristics o...