(Hypertension. 1998;31:1261-1265.)
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Dietary Sodium Restriction Impairs Endothelial Effect of Insulin
Carmine Vecchione;
Carmine Morisco;
Luigi Fratta;
Luigi Argenziano;
Bruno Trimarco;
; Giuseppe Lembo
From the IRCCS "INM NEUROMED," Pozzilli (IS) (C.V., C.M.,
B.T., G.L.), and the Department of Internal Medicine, School of Medicine,
"Federico II" University, Naples (C.V., L.F., L.A., B.T.), Italy.
Correspondence to Giuseppe Lembo, MD, PhD, IRCCS "INM NEUROMED" Località Camerelle, 86077 Pozzilli (IS), Italy. E-mail glembo{at}connect.it
AbstractHyperinsulinemia
and high salt intake represent two independent
cardiovascular risk factors. However, it is still
unknown whether the change in dietary salt intake may affect the
ability of insulin to stimulate whole-body glucose uptake and to
modulate endothelial function. Regarding this latter
issue, we have recently demonstrated that insulin enhances
endothelial-mediated
2-adrenergic
vasorelaxation. In overnight-fasted, freely moving Wistar-Kyoto rats
(10 to 12 weeks old), we assessed whole-body glucose uptake (in
milligrams per kilogram per minute) during a
euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp (insulin
infusion rate, 3 mU · kg-1 ·
min-1) after 3 weeks of normal (NSD, 2% NaCl), high (HSD,
6% NaCl), and low (LSD, 0.6% NaCl) sodium diet. Three days after the
clamp study, rats were killed to assess
2-adrenergic
vasorelaxation evoked by UK 14,304 (10-9 to
10-6 mol/L) in aortic rings in control conditions and
after insulin exposure (100 µU/mL). Different sodium intakes did not
modify the mean blood pressure or the insulin-stimulated whole-body
glucose uptake (NSD: 14±1.2, n=16; HSD: 15.4±1.7, n=14; LSD:
14.8±0.8, n=14; NS). In contrast, we confirmed the ability of insulin
to enhance
2-adrenergic vasorelaxation during NSD and
HSD (
% of maximal relaxation, NSD: from 32±3% to 58±3.4%, n=9,
P<0.01; HSD: from 33±3.8% to 59±3.5%, n=8,
P<0.01), but this effect was impaired during LSD (
%
maximal relaxation, from 36±1.5% to 36±3.4%, n=8, NS). In
conclusion, our data demonstrate that in Wistar-Kyoto rats, changes in
dietary salt intake do not modify the insulin-stimulated whole-body
glucose uptake. In contrast, LSD impairs the insulin potentiation of
2-adrenergic vasorelaxation, thus suggesting that
dietary salt restriction provokes an impairment of insulin effect on
endothelial function.
Key Words: sodium chloride vasorelaxation glucose uptake blood pressure aortic rings glucose clamp technique