Plasma and urinary catecholamines in salt-sensitive idiopathic hypertension.
- 1 April 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 11 (4), 312-319
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.11.4.312
Abstract
Nineteen patients with normal renin idiopathic hypertension were arbitrarily classified as salt-sensitive or salt-resistant depending on whether their mean arterial pressure did or did not increase by 8% or more when sodium intake was increased. The responses of the two subsets and of five normal subjects to sodium intakes of 9, 109, and 249 mEq/day given for 7 days were as follows: The salt-sensitive subjects retained more sodium than normal and plasma or urinary norepinephrine did not decrease when they were given a high sodium intake; urinary dopamine was normal but did not increase normally when sodium intake was increased. The salt-resistant subjects excreted sodium normally and plasma and urinary norepinephrine was decreased by 30 and 37%, respectively, when they were given a high sodium intake; urinary dopamine was supernormal and did not increase further when sodium intake was increased. Cumulative sodium retention during the high sodium intake was directly related to the percentage of change in plasma norepinephrine in the hypertensive subjects, suggesting that renal adrenergic activity was a factor in the impaired sodium excretion in the salt-sensitive patients. Cumulative sodium retention and the percentage of change in plasma norepinephrine were inversely related to urinary dopamine in the hypertensive subjects, suggesting that increased formation of dopamine in renal and neural tissue in the salt-resistant subjects may have been responsible for the differences between the subsets in renal and adrenergic responses to a high sodium intake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Definitions and characteristics of sodium sensitivity and blood pressure resistance.Hypertension, 1986
- Renal and endocrine response to saline infusion in essential hypertension.Hypertension, 1986
- Red-Cell Lithium-Sodium Countertransport and Renal Lithium Clearance in HypertensionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Salt sensitivity in essential hypertension as determined by the cosinor method.Hypertension, 1985
- Adrenergic activity and peripheral hemodynamics in relation to sodium sensitivity in patients with essential hypertension.Hypertension, 1984
- Abnormal relationship between sodium intake and sympathetic nervous system activity in salt-sensitive patients with essential hypertensionKidney International, 1982
- Dopaminergic control of sympathetic tone and blood pressure: evidence in primary hypertension.Hypertension, 1980
- Plasma and urinary norepinephrine values at extremes of sodium intake in normal man.Hypertension, 1979
- Effects of Dietary Sodium and of Acute Saline Infusion on the Interrelationship between Dopamine Excretion and Adrenergic Activity in ManJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1974
- Volume-dependent essential and steroid hypertensionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1973