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(Hypertension. 1999;33:633-639.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contribution |
From the Department of Medicine, General Clinical Research Center, University of California, San Francisco, Calif.
Correspondence to Dr R. Curtis Morris, Jr, General Clinical Research Center, University of California, San Francisco, 1202 Moffitt Hospital, San Francisco, CA 94143-0126. Email cmorris{at}gcrcmail.ucsf.edu
AbstractIn 16 African Americans
(blacks, 14 men, 2 women) with average admission mean
arterial pressure (MAP, mm Hg) 99.9±3.5 (mean±SEM),
we investigated whether NaCl-induced renal vasoconstriction attends
salt sensitivity and, if so, whether supplemental KHCO3
ameliorates both conditions. Throughout a 3-week period under
controlled metabolic conditions, all subjects ate diets
containing 15 mmol NaCl and 30 mmol potassium
(K+) (per 70 kg body wt [BW] per day). Throughout weeks 2
and 3, NaCl was loaded to 250 mmol/d; throughout week 3, dietary
K+ was supplemented to 170 mmol/d (KHCO3).
On the last day of each study week, we measured renal blood flow (RBF)
and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) using renal clearances
of PAH and inulin. Ten subjects were salt sensitive (SS) (
MAP
>+5%) and 6 salt resistant (SR). In NaCl-loaded SS but not SR
subjects, RBF (mL/min/1.73 m2) decreased from 920±75 to
828±46 (P<0.05); filtration fraction (FF, %)
increased from 19.4± to 21.4 (P<0.001); and renal
vascular resistance (RVR) (103xmm Hg/[mL/min])
increased from 101±8 to 131±10 (P<0.001). In all
subjects combined,
MAP varied inversely with
RBF
(r =-0.57, P=0.02) and directly with
RVR (r = 0.65, P=0.006) and
FF
(r = 0.59, P=0.03), but not with MAP
before NaCl loading. When supplemental KHCO3 abolished the
pressor effect of NaCl in SS subjects, RBF was unaffected but GFR and
FF decreased. The results show that in marginally
K+-deficient blacks (1) NaCl-induced renal
vasoconstrictive dysfunction attends salt sensitivity;
(2) the dysfunction varies in extent directly with the NaCl-induced
increase in blood pressure (BP); and (3) is complexly affected by
supplemented KHCO3, GFR and FF decreasing but RBF not
changing. In blacks, NaCl-induced renal vasoconstriction may be a
pathogenetic event in salt sensitivity.
Key Words: race normotension kidney sodium chloride, dietary potassium
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