Literature DB >> 10804778

Influence of salt intake on the daytime-nighttime blood pressure variation in normotensive and hypertensive black subjects.

A Damasceno1, P Caupers, A Santos, E Lobo, E Sevene, M Bicho, J Polónia.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the influence of different salt-intake regimens on the circadian rhythm of blood pressure (daytime-night-time relationship) in normotensive and hypertensive black subjects with different patterns of salt sensitivity.
METHODS: Randomized, cross-over study. Twenty normotensive (NT) and 27 hypertensive (HT) black subjects were kept on a low-sodium diet (30 mmol sodium/d, LS) and on a high-sodium diet (300 mmol sodium/d, HS) for 1 week each. On the last day of each regimen, 24 hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was performed.
RESULTS: Eight normotensives were classified as salt-sensitive (SS), all with haptoglobin phenotypes (FeHap) 1,1 or 1,2, and 12 as salt resistant (SR), 5 with FeHap 2,2. Seventeen hypertensives were classified as SS, all with FeHap 1,1 or 1,2, and 11 as SR, 2 with FeHap 2,2. Salt sensitivity criterium was: difference > 5 mmHg of 24 h mean blood pressure from low sodium to high sodium. The pattern of daytime-nighttime blood pressure relationship between LS and HS was only modified (respectively from dipper to non-dipper) in HT-SS, but not in NT-SS, NT-SR and HT-SR. The percentual drop in nighttime mean blood pressure was about 10% in HT-SR and in NT-SR either under LS or HS. In NT-SS, the percentual night-time drop in mean blood pressure was lower than that of NT-RS (i.e. about 7-8%), but it was not different on LS and on HS. In contrast, in HT-SS, the percentual nighttime drop in mean blood pressure on HS (6%) was significantly lower than that on LS (10%, p < 0.01). In the 27 HT, but not in the NT, changes in the nocturnal drop in mean blood pressure induced by salt restriction correlated positively with the degree of salt sensitivity (r = 0.45, p < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: In black subjects, the pattern of nighttime-daytime blood pressure relationship appears to be modified from LS to HS diets (or vice-versa) only in SS hypertensive subjects, but neither in NT-SS nor in NT-SS and HT-SR. Only in HT-SS, but not in the other groups, salt restriction shifts the circadian rhythm of blood pressure from a non-dipper to a dipper pattern. We conclude that in black salt-sensitive hypertensives, salt restriction improves the circadian rhythm of blood pressure. This may have important therapeutic consequences on target organ damage associated with non-dipper patterns.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10804778

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Port Cardiol        ISSN: 0870-2551            Impact factor:   1.374


  3 in total

Review 1.  Understanding the Two Faces of Low-Salt Intake.

Authors:  Branko Braam; Xiaohua Huang; William A Cupples; Shereen M Hamza
Journal:  Curr Hypertens Rep       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 5.369

2.  The Correlation Between Urinary Sodium Excretion and Blood Pressure in Hospitalized Adult Patients with Hypertension.

Authors:  Li-Qin Duan; Qiong Li; Li Zhao; Jin-Fang Zhao; Min Guo; Hong-Tao Shi; Lin Zhang; Qing-Hua Han
Journal:  Adv Ther       Date:  2021-03-19       Impact factor: 3.845

3.  The role of salt intake and salt sensitivity in the management of hypertension in South Asian people with chronic kidney disease: a randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Ione de Brito-Ashurst; Lin Perry; Thomas A B Sanders; Jane E Thomas; Hamish Dobbie; Mira Varagunam; Muhammad M Yaqoob
Journal:  Heart       Date:  2013-06-13       Impact factor: 5.994

  3 in total

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