Hypertension, Vol 19, 535-540, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
EM Mervaala, JJ Himberg, J Laakso, P Tuomainen and H Karppanen
The effects on blood pressure and the development of cardiac hypertrophy of
sodium chloride (regular salt) and a novel potassium-, magnesium-, and
l-lysine-enriched salt alternative, which in a previous study prolonged the
life span of hypertensive rats nearly threefold as compared with the
animals receiving regular salt, were compared both in spontaneously
hypertensive rats and their hypertension-resistant genetic controls. In
particular, the possible protective effect of increased intakes of
potassium, magnesium, and l-lysine during a high intake of sodium chloride
was examined. Therefore, the salt alternative was added at 1.75 times
higher levels to produce the same dietary levels of sodium chloride in the
regular salt and the salt alternative groups. Regular salt produced a
remarkable left ventricular hypertrophy in both rat strains, but as
compared with the respective control groups, it induced an increase of
blood pressure only in the spontaneously hypertensive rats. The salt
alternative did not induce a rise in blood pressure in either of the rat
strains, nor did it produce left ventricular hypertrophy in the
hypertension-resistant rats and, in the spontaneously hypertensive animals,
significantly less hypertrophy than regular salt. The salt alternative
appeared to prevent the sodium chloride-induced volume load since plasma
levels of atrial natriuretic peptide were increased in the regular salt
groups but remained normal in the salt alternative groups. Therefore,
potassium, magnesium, and/or l-lysine of the salt alternative produced a
powerful protection against the harmful effects of sodium chloride.
ARTICLES
Beneficial effects of a potassium- and magnesium-enriched salt alternative
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Helsinki, Finland.
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