首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Salt Intake and Plasma Atrial Natriuretic Peptide and Nitric Oxide in Hypertension
Salt Intake and Plasma Atrial Natriuretic Peptide and Nitric Oxide in Hypertension

 

作者: Vito M. Campese,   Medhat Tawadrous,   Roberto Bigazzi,   Stefano Bianchi,   Amardeep S. Mann,   Suzanne Oparil,   Leopoldo Raij,  

 

期刊: Hypertension  (OVID Available online 1996)
卷期: Volume 28, issue 3  

页码: 335-340

 

ISSN:0194-911X

 

年代: 1996

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

In response to a high salt intake, salt-sensitive hypertensive individuals retain more sodium and manifest a rise in blood pressure greater than that in salt-resistant individuals. In this study, we tested whether salt sensitivity might be related at least in part to reduced secretion of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) or to abnormal nitric oxide production. We measured plasma ANP and NO2+ NO3in 7 normotensive individuals and 13 salt-sensitive and 14 salt-resistant blacks with essential hypertension under conditions of low (10 mEq/d) and high (250 mEq/d) salt intake. To evaluate possible racial differences in ANP secretion, we also measured plasma ANP in 6 salt-sensitive and 8 salt-resistant hypertensive whites during low and high salt intakes. Under low salt conditions, plasma ANP levels were not different in normotensive control subjects and salt-sensitive and salt-resistant hypertensive blacks. During high salt intake, plasma ANP levels did not change in control subjects and salt-resistant patients but decreased in salt-sensitive patients. ANP levels after high salt diet were lower (P < .01) in salt-sensitive than salt-resistant blacks. In hypertensive whites, high salt intake caused no significant change in plasma ANP. Under low salt conditions, plasma NO2+ NO3levels were higher (P < .05) in salt-sensitive (189 plus/minus 7.9 micro mol/L) and salt-resistant (195 plus/minus 13.5 micro mol/L) black patients than in control subjects (108 plus/minus 9.7 micro mol/L). During high salt intake, plasma NO2+ NO3decreased significantly (P < .01) in both salt-sensitive (150 plus/minus 7.0 micro mol/L) and salt-resistant (142 plus/minus 9.0 micro mol/L) patients. These studies show that under conditions of high salt intake, salt-sensitive hypertensive blacks manifest a paradoxical decrease in ANP secretion. This abnormality may play a role in the reduced ability of these individuals to excrete a sodium load and in the sodium-induced rise in blood pressure. This study does not support the hypothesis that salt sensitivity depends on a deficit of nitric oxide production, but it suggests that high salt intake may alter the endothelium-dependent adaptation of peripheral resistance vessels. (Hypertension. 1996;28:335-340.)

 



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