(Hypertension. 1999;34:181-186.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions |
From the Department of Medicine, Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Hypertension, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond (D.K.W., D.A.S.), and the Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (S.B.M.).
AbstractThis study examined the
effects of increasing dietary potassium on ambulatory blood pressure
nondipping status (<10% decrease in blood pressure from awake to
asleep) and cardiovascular reactivity in salt-sensitive
and salt-resistant black adolescents. A sample of 58
normotensive (blood pressure, 101/57±9/4 mm Hg) black
adolescents (aged 13 to 16 years) participated in a 5-day low sodium
diet (50 mmol/24 h) followed by a 10-day high sodium diet
(150 mmol/24 h NaCl supplement) to determine salt-sensitivity
status. Participants showed a significant increase in urinary sodium
excretion (24±19 to 224±65 mmol/24 h) and were identified as
salt-sensitive if their mean blood pressure increase was
5
mm Hg from the low to high sodium diet. Sixteen salt-sensitive and 42
salt-resistant subjects were then randomly assigned to either a
3-week high potassium diet (80 mmol/24 h) or usual diet control
group. Urinary potassium excretion significantly increased in the
treatment group (35±7 to 57±21 mmol/24 h). At baseline, a
significantly greater percentage of salt-sensitive (44%) compared with
salt-resistant (7%) subjects were nondippers on the basis of
diastolic blood pressure classifications
(P<0.04). After the dietary intervention, all of the
salt-sensitive subjects in the high potassium group achieved dipper
status as a result of a drop in nocturnal diastolic blood
pressure (daytime, 69 versus 67 mm Hg; nighttime, 69
versus 57 mm Hg). No significant group differences in
cardiovascular reactivity were observed. These results
suggest that a positive relationship between dietary potassium intake
and blood pressure modulation can still exist even when daytime blood
pressure is unchanged by a high potassium diet.
Key Words: sodium potassium blood pressure blacks adolescence
This article has been cited by other articles:
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A. Sachdeva and A. B. Weder Nocturnal Sodium Excretion, Blood Pressure Dipping, and Sodium Sensitivity Hypertension, October 1, 2006; 48(4): 527 - 533. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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