Hypertension, Vol 24, 24-29, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
R Pedrinelli, G Catapano, G Dell'Omo, E Melillo, L Talarico, C Di Muro, O Giampietro, F Carmassi, C Giusti and V Di Bello
In response to hypertension, arterioles remodel their structure, the heart
develops myocardial hypertrophy, and the kidney reduces creatinine
clearance and increases albuminuria. To better understand the
interrelations among the target organs involved in hypertension, we
evaluated minimal forearm vascular resistances--a hemodynamic index of
arteriolar structure derived from mean blood pressure and maximal
postischemic forearm blood flow--the echocardiographic indexes of cardiac
structure, and urinary albumin excretion and creatinine clearance in 29
male mild to moderate non-macroalbuminuric essential hypertensive patients
on no drugs and 11 age- and sex-matched normotensive control subjects.
Minimal forearm resistances were elevated in hypertensive patients and
correlated with left ventricular mass, wall thickness, and mean arterial
pressure. Patients with abnormal minimal forearm resistances (2 SD above
normal) were characterized by higher pressure, greater wall thickness,
lower creatinine clearance, and higher albumin excretion, suggesting that
maximal forearm flow capacity does relate to the hemodynamic load exerted
on both the kidney and heart. However, the correlation with cardiac
structure and mean arterial pressure explained only part of the variability
of minimal forearm resistances. Furthermore, no correlation among these
parameters was found when hypertensive patients were evaluated separately
from normotensive subjects, possibly because of heterogeneous factors
active on arteriolar structure and unrelated to the pressor load. Overall,
the data suggest that the development of abnormal minimal forearm
resistances in the course of the hypertensive process is related to the
pressor load, but its details need further understanding.
ARTICLES
Forearm blood flow reserve and cardiac and renal indexes of pressure load in normotensive and hypertensive individuals
I Clinica Medica, University of Pisa, Italy.
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