Literature DB >> 7704285

Salt sensitive essential hypertension evaluated by 24 hour ambulatory blood pressure.

E Gerdts1, O L Myking, P Omvik.   

Abstract

Thirty men with essential hypertension were examined at three different levels of sodium intake, containing 135, 44 and 290 mmol sodium per day, respectively. Ten patients who increased their 24 hour mean ambulatory blood pressure 10% or more when going from low to high sodium intake were defined as salt sensitive, the others as salt resistant. The casual and 24 hour ambulatory blood pressure measurements defined partly different patients as salt sensitive. In multiple regression analysis, salt sensitivity was associated with an increase in diuresis during low sodium intake, demonstrating a dissociation between water and sodium excretion during salt depletion in the salt sensitive group. The change 24 hour ambulatory blood pressure during salt repletion was positively correlated to the increase in the atrial natriuretic peptide (p < 0.01), and inversely correlated to the plasma concentration of atrial natriuretic peptide after salt depletion (p < 0.01). No difference in plasma norepinephrine, renin, aldosterone, plasma volume, blood volume or 24 hour sodium excretion was found between salt sensitive and salt resistant subjects. We conclude that salt sensitivity is difficult to describe as an entity, but seems to be associated with lower levels of atrial natriuretic peptide and a different response to salt depletion.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7704285     DOI: 10.3109/08037059409102290

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood Press        ISSN: 0803-7051            Impact factor:   2.835


  2 in total

1.  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

2.  The Effects of Short-Term Changes in Sodium Intake on Plasma Marinobufagenin Levels in Patients with Primary Salt-Sensitive and Salt-Insensitive Hypertension.

Authors:  Katarzyna Łabno-Kirszniok; Agata Kujawa-Szewieczek; Andrzej Wiecek; Grzegorz Piecha
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2021-04-29       Impact factor: 5.717

  2 in total

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