Abstract/SummaryHeart failure is an increasingly prevalent disease with high mortality and public health burden. It is associated with autonomic imbalance characterized by sympathetic hyperactivity and parasympathetic hypoactivity. Evolving novel interventional and device-based therapy has sought to restore autonomic balance by neuromodulation.Results of preclinical animal studies and early clinical trials have demonstrated its safety and efficacy in heart failure. In this review article, we will discuss specific neuromodulatory treatment modalities individually-spinal cord stimulation, vagus nerve stimulation, baroreceptor activation therapy and renal sympathetic nerve denervation.
Key Points (3-5)• Heart failure (HF) is a disease categorized by sympathetic hyperactivity, parasympathetic withdrawal and impaired baroreflex control of sympathetic activation.• Several measures of autonomic modulation either by implanted devices or interventions seek to restore the autonomic balance in HF and improve outcomes. These measures include spinal cord stimulation, vagus nerve 3 stimulation, baroreceptor activation therapy and renal sympathetic nerve denervation.• Preclinical work and the majority of early clinical trials demonstrate the benefits of these modalities in HF. Additional larger, well-designed, outcome-based clinical trials are warranted to verify the results and determine whether these evolving, innovative neuromodulation approaches can be recommended to the growing population of HF patients.4