Literature DB >> 9149670

Reduced dietary potassium reversibly enhances vasopressor response to stress in African Americans.

K Sudhir1, A Forman, S L Yi, J Sorof, O Schmidlin, A Sebastian, R C Morris.   

Abstract

Acute vasopressor responses to stress are adrenergically mediated and hence potentially subject to differential modulation by dietary potassium and sodium. The greater vasopressor responsiveness in blacks compared with whites might then be consequent not only to a high dietary salt intake but also to a marginally reduced dietary potassium intake. Under controlled metabolic conditions, we compared acute vasopressor responses to cold and mental stress in black and white normotensive men during three successive dietary periods: (1) while dietary potassium was reduced (30 mmol K+/70 kg per day) and salt was restricted (10 to 14 days); (2) while salt was loaded (15 to 250 mmol Na+/70 kg per day) (7 days); and (3) while salt loading was continued and potassium was either supplemented (70 mmol K+/70 kg per day) (7 to 21 days) in 9 blacks and 6 whites or continued reduced (30 mmol K+/70 kg per day) (28 days) in 4 blacks (time controls). At the lower potassium intake, cold-induced increase in forearm vascular resistance in blacks was twice that in whites during both salt restriction and salt loading. Normalization of dietary potassium attenuated cold-induced increases in both forearm vascular resistance and systolic and diastolic blood pressures in blacks but only in systolic pressure in whites. In blacks but not in whites, normalization of dietary potassium attenuated mental stress-induced increases in systolic and diastolic pressures. In normotensive blacks but not whites, a marginally reduced dietary intake of potassium reversibly enhances adrenergically mediated vasopressor responsiveness to stress. That responsiveness so enhanced over time might contribute to the pathogenesis of hypertension in blacks.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9149670     DOI: 10.1161/01.hyp.29.5.1083

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


  4 in total

Review 1.  Hypertension and the kidney.

Authors:  D E Wesson
Journal:  Curr Hypertens Rep       Date:  2001-12       Impact factor: 5.369

Review 2.  No evidence of racial disparities in blood pressure salt sensitivity when potassium intake exceeds levels recommended in the US dietary guidelines.

Authors:  Theodore W Kurtz; Stephen E DiCarlo; Michal Pravenec; R Curtis Morris
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2021-04-02       Impact factor: 4.733

3.  Serum potassium predicts time to blood pressure response among African Americans with hypertensive nephrosclerosis.

Authors:  M Bhalla; H Aziz; E Richard; M S Lipkowitz; V Bhatnagar
Journal:  J Hum Hypertens       Date:  2012-11-15       Impact factor: 3.012

Review 4.  Meeting the challenge to improve the treatment of hypertension in blacks.

Authors:  Antonio Alberto Lopes; Sherman A James; Friedrich K Port; Akinlolu O Ojo; Lawrence Y Agodoa; Kenneth A Jamerson
Journal:  J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich)       Date:  2003 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 3.738

  4 in total

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