Literature DB >> 10751235

Diastolic blood pressure is related to urinary sodium excretion in hypertensive Chinese patients.

B M Cheung1, S P Ho, A H Cheung, C P Lau.   

Abstract

We studied 70 Hong Kong Chinese patients with untreated hypertension and 47 normotensive controls. Blood pressure measurements and 24-h urine collection were performed for each patient, and were repeated 12 weeks later in 14 hypertensive patients who remained untreated. Twenty-two hypertensive patients underwent ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. The primary hypothesis tested was a correlation between diastolic blood pressure and 24-h urinary sodium excretion. In the hypertensive patients, diastolic blood pressure correlated with 24-h urinary sodium excretion (r=0.41, p<0.001), even after adjustment for age, gender, body mass index, ethanol intake and season (r=0.34, p=0.02). In normotensive controls, diastolic blood pressure did not correlate with sodium excretion (r=0.21, p=0.16). A correlation between diastolic blood pressure and sodium excretion was also observed in the patients who underwent ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (r=0.47, p=0.026), and in repeat measurements in untreated patients (r=0.60, p=0.02). Systolic blood pressure did not correlate with sodium excretion, although it increased with patient age (0.6+/-0.1 mmHg/year, p<0.001). In a multiple regression analysis with diastolic blood pressure as the dependent variable, the regression coefficient was 0.06+/-0.02 mmHg/mmol Na. The regression coefficients for ambulatory diastolic blood pressure and diastolic pressure repeated at 12 weeks were 0.07+/-0.03 and 0. 09+/-0.04 mmHg/mmol Na, respectively. Urinary sodium excretion was related to diastolic blood pressure in our hypertensive patients, accounting for 17% of the variance of diastolic blood pressure.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10751235     DOI: 10.1093/qjmed/93.3.163

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  QJM        ISSN: 1460-2393


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