Circulation, Vol 84, 92-100, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
M Volpe, G Lembo, N De Luca, F Lamenza, C Tritto, B Ricciardelli, M Molaro, P De Campora, G Condorelli and V Rendina
BACKGROUND. Acute cardiac and cerebrovascular accidents are more frequent
in hypertensive subjects with a family history of acute vascular accidents.
The mechanisms underlying the susceptibility to vascular disease in these
subjects are unknown. We investigated whether a parental history of
premature heart attack or stroke in hypertensive subjects is associated
with abnormalities of sodium handling. METHODS AND RESULTS. Patients with
mild, uncomplicated essential hypertension were divided into two subgroups
according to family history: a subgroup with a parental history of
premature heart attack or stroke (FV+, n = 18) and a subgroup with a family
history completely negative for vascular accidents (FV-, n = 14). The two
subgroups were comparable with respect to age, weight, sex distribution,
blood pressure, duration of hypertension, cardiovascular risk factors,
renal function, and organ damage. Baseline plasma renin activity (PRA),
concentrations of aldosterone (PA), atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), and
norepinephrine, and urinary electrolyte excretion were also comparable in
the two subgroups. Despite these similarities, the responses to an acute
saline load, measured under controlled metabolic and experimental
conditions, were different in the two subgroups. In the FV+ subgroup at 60
minutes of saline load, PRA fell by 1.0 +/- 0.2 ng/ml/hr and PA
concentration by 89.4 +/- 26 pg/ml and ANF concentration increased by 38
+/- 9 pg/ml, whereas in the FV- subgroup the corresponding responses were
-2.3 +/- 0.3 ng/ml/hr (p less than 0.005), -190 +/- 43 pg/ml (p less than
0.05), and 80 +/- 13 pg/ml (p less than 0.005), respectively. Urinary
sodium excretion was delayed in the FV+ subgroup (270 +/- 67 mu eq/min at
60 minutes) compared with the FV- subgroup (555 +/- 157 mu eq/min at 60
minutes, p less than 0.05). At 120 minutes of saline load, significant (p
less than 0.005) differences in PRA and ANF concentration were still
observed. In a control group of eight normal subjects the responses to a
saline load were comparable to those in the FV- subgroup but greater than
those in the FV+ subgroup at 60 minutes. CONCLUSIONS. These results provide
evidence that the hormonal and renal adjustments to an acute salt load are
impaired in hypertensive patients with a parental history of vascular
accidents. We speculate that abnormalities of sodium handling may represent
markers of a more rapid development of vascular injury in human
hypertension.
ARTICLES
Abnormal hormonal and renal responses to saline load in hypertensive patients with parental history of cardiovascular accidents
Prima Clinica Medica, Seconda Facolta di Medicina e Chirurgia, Universita degli Studi di Napoli, Italy.
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