Hypertension, Vol 9, 459-466, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
AB Weder, MA Fitzpatrick, BA Torretti, AL Hinderliter, BM Egan and S Julius
Red blood cell Li+-Na+ countertransport and Na+-K+ cotransport activities,
home blood pressure, invasive systemic hemodynamics, and limb venous
compliance were measured in 65 white men (23 normotensive, 22 borderline
hypertensive, and 20 mild essential hypertensive subjects). Li+-Na+
countertransport activity was positively and significantly correlated with
subject-determined home systolic blood pressure (r = 0.31, p less than
0.02) and with directly measured systolic (r = 0.29, p less than 0.02) and
diastolic (r = 0.27, p less than 0.03) blood pressures in the hemodynamic
laboratory, independent of potential confounding variables. Analysis of the
hemodynamic determinants of blood pressure revealed a significant positive
correlation of countertransport with vascular resistance (r = 0.30, p less
than 0.02) but not with cardiac output or cardiac index. High red blood
cell Na+-K+ cotransport activity was not independently associated with
hypertension or with a characteristic hemodynamic pattern but was related
to decreased venous compliance. Red blood cell Li+-Na+ countertransport
deserves further study as a marker for the genetic substrate of human
essential hypertension. Red cell Na+-K+ cotransport may be altered
secondarily by factors related to high blood pressure and seems to be a
valid marker for abnormalities of the venous system in hypertension.
ARTICLES
Red blood cell Li+-Na+ countertransport, Na+-K+ cotransport, and the hemodynamics of hypertension
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