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Hypertension. 1997;30:1162-1168

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*Diabetes Type 1
*Diets

(Hypertension. 1997;30:1162-1168.)
© 1997 American Heart Association, Inc.


Articles

Sodium, Blood Pressure, and Arterial Distensibility in Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus

Jan Lambert; Rik Pijpers; Frans J. van Ittersum; Emile F.I. Comans; Mieke Aarsen; Erik J. Pieper; Ab J.M. Donker; Coen D.A. Stehouwer

From the Departments of Internal Medicine (J.L., F.J. van I., M.A., E.J.P., A.J.M.D., C.D.A.S.) and Nuclear Medicine (R.P., E.F.I.C.), Academisch Ziekenhuis Vrije Universiteit, and the Institute for Cardiovascular Research, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Correspondence to J. Lambert, MD, Department of Internal Medicine, Academisch Ziekenhuis Vrije Universiteit, PO Box 7057, 1007 MB Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Abstract We investigated 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure and arterial distensibility, a marker of biophysical vessel wall properties, in 32 normoalbuminuric type I diabetic patients and 32 healthy control subjects on diets containing 50 mmol and 200 mmol sodium per day. The increase in daytime diastolic blood pressure from 50 to 200 mmol sodium was significantly higher in the diabetic patients than in the control subjects (2.3±4.9 versus 0.2±3.7 mm Hg, P<.05). On a high sodium regimen, femoral artery distensibility was decreased in the diabetic patients compared with the control subjects (19.2±7.6 versus 24.1±9.3 10-3/kPa, P<.05). Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in the diabetic patients on a high sodium diet decreased daytime diastolic blood pressure and increased femoral artery distensibility. The blood pressure decrease in response to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition correlated significantly with the blood pressure increase to sodium (for 24-hour systolic and diastolic blood pressure, r=.72, P<.001 and r=.76, P<.001). In addition, we found that in the diabetic patients on a high sodium diet, the renal blood flow response to exogenous angiotensin II was not bimodally distributed, as is the case in essential hypertension, in which a subgroup of the patients are characterized by sodium sensitivity of the blood pressure and an abnormal renal blood flow response to exogenous angiotensin II ("nonmodulator phenotype"). These results show that blood pressure in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is sodium sensitive, but that this is not related to the nonmodulator phenotype, and suggest that in IDDM a relatively high sodium intake may be a factor that predisposes to the development of diabetic vascular disease.


Key Words: diabetes mellitus, insulin-dependent • elasticity • renal circulation • angiotensin II • sodium




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