Hypertension, Vol 3, 87-92, Copyright © 1981 by American Heart Association
A Fernandez-Cruz Jr, RH Noth, MN Lassman, JB Hollis and PJ Mulrow
To determine the effect of diabetes mellitus on the renin-aldosterone
system, independent of age, nephropathy, or hypertension, 16 normotensive
diabetics with long-term disease (mean duration, 15 years) and no (14) or
minimal (2) proteinuria, were compared to nine age- matched, normotensive
controls. Plasma renin activity (PRA) measured supine and after 4 hours of
quiet ambulation, both on an ad libitum diet and on Day 4 of a 10 mEq low
sodium diet, was always lower in the diabetics (31%-56% of control values).
After the combined stimulus of sodium depletion and ambulation, PRA was 2.2
+/- 0.4 in the diabetics compared to 3.4 +/- 0.2 ng/ml/hr in controls (p
less than 0.025). On the low sodium diet, PRA and the postural response of
PRA correlated directly with the degree of autonomic dysfunction as
quantitated by the velocity of esophageal peristalsis (r = 0.60, p less
than 0.05; r = 0.75, p less than 0.005 respectively), suggesting that
autonomic neuropathy was an important factor contributing to low PRA in
these patients. No other parameters correlated with PRA. Plasma renin
substrate (PRS) tended to be lower in diabetics (1053 +/- 95 vs 1358 +/-
132 ng AI/ml; p less than 0.07) but not sufficiently so to account for the
substantial difference in PRA. Furthermore, PRS did not correlate with PRA.
Fasting blood sugar, while higher in diabetics (209 vs 96 mg/dl), and
creatinine clearance, which was lower (112 +/- 13 vs 78 +/- 4 ml/min; p
less than 0.01), also did not correlate with PRA. Other factors, including
serum creatinine, serum potassium, urinary aldosterone, blood pressure, and
body weight, and the responses of these parameters to sodium depletion,
were similar in diabetics and controls. These data implicate visceral
neuropathy as a major factor in the hyporeninemia of these diabetics.
ARTICLES
Low plasma renin activity in normotensive patients with diabetes mellitus: relationship to neuropathy
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