Although the beta1-adrenergic blocking agent atenolol is an established antihypertensive therapy, its effect on peripheral sympathetic vasoconstrictor drive has remained controversial. In patients with hypertension, atenolol therapy has been reported to either increase or have no effect on peripheral vascular resistance, despite other reports showing no change or a decrease in peripheral sympathetic drive. This study was designed, in patients with untreated essential hypertension (EHT), to quantify changes in simultaneously measured peroneal muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and calf vascular resistance (CVR) accompanying atenolol therapy. MSNA was quantified as the mean frequency of single units (s-MSNA) and as multiunit bursts (MSNA bursts) using the technique of microneurography, and CVR was measured using a standard plethysmographic technique. Firstly, by comparing two age- and body weight- matched groups, each of 14 patients with hypertension, we found that the group on atenolol therapy (treated-HT) had similar MSNA values counted over the same number of cardiac beats and similar CVR levels (at least P>0.40) to the group without therapy (untreated-HT). Secondly, we examined 10 EHT patients before and after 8+/-0.4 weeks of oral atenolol therapy (HT-A) in comparison to seven control patients with hypertension and no treatment (HT-C) who were examined over a similar period of time. We found that the measures of MSNA and CVR did not significantly change in both groups. We conclude that the arterial pressure lowering effect of atenolol was not related to significant changes in central vasoconstrictor sympathetic drive to the periphery.