Hypertension, Vol 22, 323-330, Copyright © 1993 by American Heart Association
ST Turner and SL Reilly
The objective of this study was to evaluate whether renal excretion of
sodium is impaired and whether tubular reabsorption of sodium is increased
in normotensive white men with a familial predisposition to develop
essential hypertension. We compared 11 normotensive sons of two
hypertensive parents (SOHT) with 11 normotensive sons of two normotensive
parents (SONT); renal sodium handling was assessed after 1 week of
low-sodium diet (10 mmol/d) and after 1 week of high-sodium diet (200
mmol/d). The SOHT were on average 5.5 years older than the SONT (46.9 +/-
5.2 [SD] vs 41.4 +/- 4.1, P = .012). On the sixth day of each diet, mean
urinary sodium excretion did not differ between the two groups (12.9 +/-
6.3 vs 12.7 +/- 6.7 mmol/d on low-sodium diet, P = .930; 197 +/- 25 vs 200
+/- 27 mmol/d on high-sodium diet, P = .817). On the seventh day of each
diet, baseline means for filtered load of sodium, absolute excretion of
sodium, fractional excretion of sodium (an index of total tubular sodium
reabsorption), and fractional excretion of lithium (an inverse index of
proximal tubular sodium reabsorption) also did not differ between the
groups. To assess renal sodium handling under non-steady-state conditions,
we infused 2 L normal saline intravenously over a 2-hour period. The means
for absolute excretion of sodium, fractional excretion of sodium, and
fractional excretion of lithium increased from baseline, but the increases
did not differ in magnitude between the groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250
WORDS)
ARTICLES
Renal sodium excretion in sons of hypertensive parents
Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic and Foundation, Rochester, Minn. 55905.
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