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(Hypertension. 2001;37:923.)
© 2001 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions |
From the Department of Medicine IV/Nephrology, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany.
Correspondence to Prof Dr med Roland E. Schmieder, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Medizinische Klinik IV/4, Klinikum Nürnberg Süd, Breslauer Straße 201, D-90471 Nürnberg, FRG. E-mail roland.schmieder{at}rzmail.uni-erlangen.de
In
hypertensive rats, environmental stress causes sodium retention by an
exaggerated increase in renal sympathetic nerve activity, which is
modulated by angiotensin II. We tested whether
similar effects can be observed in humans. In 66 normotensive subjects
(half of them with a family history of hypertension) and 36 subjects
with mild essential hypertension, urinary sodium excretion and renal
hemodynamics were examined at rest and during mental
stress treated either with placebo or ACE inhibition in a double-blind,
randomized, cross-over design. Despite a marked increase in
glomerular filtration rate in response to mental stress
(
glomerular filtration rate, 4.3±7.7 mL/min in
normotensives without versus 5.6±8.4 mL/min in normotensives with a
family history versus 10.1±5.7 mL/min in patients with mild essential
hypertension; P<0.002), the
increase in urinary sodium excretion was blunted in patients with mild
essential hypertension (
urinary sodium excretion, 0.12±0.17
mmol/min versus 0.10±0.14 mmol/min versus 0.05±0.14
mmol/min; P<0.05). ACE
inhibition corrected the natriuretic response to mental
stress in subjects with mild essential hypertension (
urinary sodium
excretion, 0.05±0.14 mmol/min with placebo versus 0.13±0.19
mmol/min with ACE inhibition;
P<0.01); thus, after ACE
inhibition, urinary sodium excretion increased similarly in all 3
groups. In conclusion, impaired sodium excretion occurs during mental
stress in human essential hypertension but not in subjects with
positive family history of hypertension. This abnormality in sodium
handling during activation of the sympathetic nervous system appears to
be mediated by angiotensin II.
Key Words: sodium hypertension, essential stress renin-angiotensin system
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