Literature DB >> 10209076

Salt-sensitivity classification in normotensive adults.

R D Mattes1, B Falkner.   

Abstract

The objectives of this study were to assess the reliability, sensitivity and specificity of salt-sensitivity classification in normotensive adults and to determine the predictive power of four clinical indices for salt-sensitivity. A total of 66 healthy, normotensive, free-living adults were administered 11-day salt-sensitivity diagnostic dietary salt challenges on two occasions to permit assessment of classification test-retest reliability. An oral glucose tolerance test, an acute saline loading test, gustatory testing and determination of salivary flow and sodium concentration were carried out to assess (by correlation analysis) their predictive power for salt-sensitivity. Following these procedures, 21 participants followed a reduced-sodium diet for 4 months, during which blood pressure was monitored monthly to allow evaluation of salt-sensitivity classification sensitivity and specificity. Regression was used to develop a predictive model for salt-sensitivity. Salt-sensitivity classification was not highly reliable (kappa-value=0.38), sensitive (0.73) or specific (0.60). No single index was highly predictive of classification status, but a model composed of five indices accounted for 92% of the variance in blood pressure response to acute salt challenge. The dietary salt challenge procedure used here for salt-sensitivity classification of normotensive adults had low test-retest reliability. While a battery of easily measured attributes may facilitate rapid salt-sensitivity classification, such a diagnosis provides only limited insight regarding blood pressure responsiveness to chronic dietary salt restriction in normotensive adults.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10209076

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Sci (Lond)        ISSN: 0143-5221            Impact factor:   6.124


  3 in total

1.  Different antioxidants status, total antioxidant power and free radicals in essential hypertension.

Authors:  Manoj K Kashyap; Vibha Yadav; Badan S Sherawat; Sanjay Jain; Savita Kumari; Madhu Khullar; Prakash C Sharma; Ravinder Nath
Journal:  Mol Cell Biochem       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 3.396

2.  Reproducibility of blood pressure responses to dietary sodium and potassium interventions: the GenSalt study.

Authors:  Dongfeng Gu; Qi Zhao; Jing Chen; Ji-Chun Chen; Jianfeng Huang; Lydia A Bazzano; Fanghong Lu; Jianjun Mu; Jianxin Li; Jie Cao; Katherine Mills; Chung-Shiuan Chen; Treva Rice; L Lee Hamm; Jiang He
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2013-07-29       Impact factor: 10.190

Review 3.  An Appraisal of Methods Recently Recommended for Testing Salt Sensitivity of Blood Pressure.

Authors:  Theodore W Kurtz; Stephen E DiCarlo; Michal Pravenec; R Curtis Morris
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2017-04-01       Impact factor: 5.501

  3 in total

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