Hypertension, Vol 16, 235-244, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association
T Fujita, K Ando and E Ogata
Twenty-two patients with normal plasma renin and essential hypertension
were classified as "salt-sensitive" (SS) (n = 9) or "non-salt- sensitive"
(NSS) (n = 13) from an increase in mean blood pressure with changes in
sodium intake from 25 to 250 meq/day. With the high sodium diet, the SS
patients gained more weight (p less than 0.05), retained more sodium (p
less than 0.05), and had a greater increase in cardiac output (p less than
0.05). Despite the markedly increased cardiac output, systemic vascular
resistance did not change with sodium loads in the SS patients, whereas the
NSS patients had a significant decrease in systemic vascular resistance.
Thus, the greater increase in blood pressure with sodium loads in SS
patients can be attributed not only to an increase in cardiac output,
possibly resulting from greater sodium retention, but also to
inappropriately elevated systemic vascular resistance. Concomitant with a
greater increase in cardiac output, the SS patients had a greater increase
in forearm blood flow with sodium loading than the NSS patients (p less
than 0.02). In contrast, blood flow to the kidney and the liver was not
significantly changed in either group; renal (p less than 0.05) and hepatic
(p less than 0.01) vascular resistance increased significantly in SS
patients but remained unchanged in NSS patients. Thus, evidence presented
suggests that the greater increase in blood pressure with sodium loads
seems to be characterized by a very inhomogenous distribution of local flow
and resistance in SS patients; renal and hepatic blood flow remains
essentially unchanged and skeletal muscle blood flow receives almost all of
the increase in cardiac output. Moreover, systemic vascular resistance
changes did not reflect the resistance of individual beds because
vasoconstriction appeared in the kidney and the splanchnic area but was
masked by prominent vasodilation in the skeletal muscle. Because this
hemodynamic pattern is similar to the pattern evoked during defense
reaction, it is suggested that sympathetic overactivity on a selective
basis might be involved in the impaired renal function for sodium excretion
and the increase in blood pressure with sodium loads in SS patients.
ARTICLES
Systemic and regional hemodynamics in patients with salt-sensitive hypertension
Fourth Department of Internal Medicine, University of Tokyo, Japan.
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