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1.
The present study was designed to investigate the possible role of dopaminergic mechanisms in contributing to the pathogenesis of hypertension in salt sensitive patients. Eighteen patients with essential hypertension were studied while under a diet ranging from low salt to high salt, which enabled a classification in "salt-sensitive" (SS) and "nonsalt-sensitive" (NSS) groups based on a tentative criteria of a 10% increase of mean blood pressure with high salt diet. The SS patients showed reduced urinary excretion of sodium as compared with that from NSS patients. Urinary norepinephrine excretion in all patients with salt loading was suppressed, but urinary excretion of epinephrine showed a tendency to increase in SS patients after salt loading. Urinary excretion of dopamine increased in NSS patients with salt loading, but did not change in SS patients. To further evaluate the role of dopaminergic mechanisms in salt-sensitive hypertension, metoclopramide, a dopamine antagonist, was injected intravenously to all patients. With salt loading, plasma aldosterone levels increased after injection of metoclopramide in NSS patients, but did not change in SS patients. These results suggest that salt-sensitive hypertension is modulated by dopaminergic activity, which in turn is attenuated in SS patients. Decreased dopaminergic activity induced sodium retention both by a direct effect on the kidney as well as indirectly via relatively increased aldosterone secretion. Both mechanisms would help to increase intravascular volume and blood pressure in salt-sensitive hypertension.  相似文献   

2.
F Skrabal  P Kotanko  F C Luft 《Life sciences》1989,45(22):2061-2076
A high salt diet leads to up-regulation of alpha-2 adrenoceptors and down-regulation of beta-2 adrenoceptors in normotensive subjects. Although the increase in blood pressure with a high salt diet is not related to the magnitude of the alpha-2 or beta-2 adrenoceptor changes alone, it is related to the increase in the ratio of the receptor changes (operative alpha/beta adrenoceptor ratio). An increase in the operative alpha/beta adrenoceptor ratio with a high salt intake results in vasoconstriction and reduced vasodilatation at resistance vessels, as well as increased renal proximal tubular sodium reabsorption. An influence of heredity on this relationship is supported by four lines of evidence: 1) salt-sensitivity of blood pressure occurs predominantly in subjects with a family history of hypertension; 2) studies in twin children document the influence of genetic variance on salt-sensitivity of blood pressure; 3) subjects with a family history of hypertension have a significantly lower salivary sodium concentration and an altered urinary sodium excretion after salt loading compared to subjects with no such history; 4) salt-sensitivity of blood pressure may be associated with specific genetic markers. On the basis of these observations, we propose the hypothesis that enhanced inverse alpha-beta-adrenoceptor regulation in response to a high salt intake may be responsible for salt sensitivity in the normal population, and may contribute to the development of essential hypertension in susceptible individuals. This alteration is likely to be genetically mediated.  相似文献   

3.
4.
It has been reported that only one-third of normotensive subjects and half of hypertensive patients are salt-sensitive. Many causes of salt-sensitivity have been proposed. Our suggestion is that a reduced urinary kallikrein level may be one cause, since mutant kininogen-deficient rats, which cannot generate kinin in the urine, are salt-sensitive. Renal kallikrein is secreted by the connecting tubule cells of the kidney, which are located just distal to the macula densa or the tubuloglomerular feedback system. Excess amounts of sodium taken overflow into the distal tubules and are reabsorbed in the collecting ducts. Kinins generated inhibit sodium reabsorption in the collecting ducts. Both blacks and whites with essential hypertension excrete less urinary kallikrein than do their normotensive counterparts, but the mean value in "normotensive blacks" were not different from that in "hypertensive whites". African-Americans consume less potassium than whites. Potassium and ATP-sensitive potassium channel blockers are releasers of renal kallikrein. In a small-scale study, sodium loading caused more increase in the systolic blood pressure in urinary low-kallikrein group than in urinary high-kallikrein group. Large-scale clinical studies, under strict control of potassium intake, are needed to elucidate the relationship between salt-sensitivity and urinary kallikrein levels.  相似文献   

5.
Hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1α-mediated gene activation in the renal medulla in response to high salt intake plays an important role in the control of salt sensitivity of blood pressure. High salt-induced activation of HIF-1α in the renal medulla is blunted in Dahl S rats. The present study determined whether the impairment of the renal medullary HIF-1α pathway was responsible for salt sensitive hypertension in Dahl S rats. Renal medullary HIF-1α levels were induced by either transfection of HIF-1α expression plasmid or chronic infusion of CoCl? into the renal medulla, which was accompanied by increased expressions of anti-hypertensive genes, cyclooxygenase-2 and heme oxygenase-1. Overexpression of HIF-1α transgenes in the renal medulla enhanced the pressure natriuresis, promoted the sodium excretion and reduced sodium retention after salt overload. As a result, hypertension induced by 2-week high salt was significantly attenuated in rats treated with HIF-1α plasmid or CoCl?. These results suggest that an abnormal HIF-1α in the renal medulla may represent a novel mechanism mediating salt-sensitive hypertension in Dahl S rats and that induction of HIF-1α levels in the renal medulla could be a therapeutic approach for the treatment of salt-sensitive hypertension.  相似文献   

6.
There is evidence of impaired renal sodium excretion in salt-sensitive African Blacks. A decreased rate of renal sodium chloride (NaCl) excretion, low plasma renin activity and a tendency to elevated blood pressure are the hallmarks of salt sensitivity. Recent evidence indicates that increased proximal and distal tubular fluid reabsorption in some tropical residents may explain the impaired sodium excretion in these people. In this study of a cohort population, we speculated that subjects selected from that population might be salt-sensitive. We therefore measured the sodium balance in 10 normotensive male subjects over 10 consecutive days, after they had ingested a normal or a high amount of sodium, as NaCl (salt) in their diet. We quantified their renal sodium excretion rate by phenomenological analysis of their sodium balance data. We also measured plasma renin activity for 7 consecutive days in a separate group of 6 male and 4 female subjects in order to assess the state of their renin/angiotensin system. We selected all our subjects from a cohort population of 269 subjects randomly selected from a community known to have a high prevalence of primary hypertension. Our data on two separate groups of subjects from the same cohort population revealed delayed renal sodium excretion with t 1/2 of about 5 days, compared to published data for normal individuals with t 1/2 of less than 24 h. Also, plasma renin activity levels were low. Hence, our subjects are salt-sensitive. Quantification of their renal impairment is important for various reasons: it heightens one’s appreciation of the problem of salt retention in African Blacks who are salt-sensitive and it also underlines the importance of the need for further research into the benefits of dietary salt restriction for reducing cardiovascular mortality in African populations, as has been done in some Western countries. Received: 4 March 1999 / Accepted: 12 May 1999  相似文献   

7.
Linkage and association studies suggested the relationship between a-adducin polymorphism (Gly460Trp; rs4961) and genetic susceptibility to salt-sensitivity. However, the currently available results were inconsistent. This study aimed to define quantitatively the association between salt-sensitivity and α-adducin Gly460Trp polymorphism in all published case-control studies. Publications from PubMed and other databases were retrieved. The major inclusion criteria were: (1) case-control design; (2) salt-sensitivity confirmed by sodium loading tests, and (3) the distribution of genotypes given in detail. Seven case-control studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. In total they involved 820 subjects (454 salt-sensitive and 366 non-salt-sensitive). The meta-analysis shows that Gly460Trp polymorphism in general is not significantly associated with salt-sensitivity [OR (95%CI): 1.40 (0.96, 2.04),P = 0.08]. Subgroup analysis showed that the association is statistically significant in Asian people [OR (95%CI):1.33 (1.06, 1.69),P = 0.02] but not in Caucasian people [OR (95%CI):1.98 (0.57, 6.92),P = 0.28]. This indicates that blood pressure response to sodium varies between ethnical groups. More studies based on a larger population are required to evaluate further the role of a-adducin Gly460Trp polymorphism in salt-sensitive hypertension.  相似文献   

8.
Adrenomedullin reduces systemic blood pressure and increases urinary sodium excretion partly through the release of nitric oxide. We hypothesized that chronic adrenomedullin infusion ameliorates salt-sensitive hypertension and increases the expression of renal nitric oxide synthase (NOS) in Dahl salt-sensitive (DS) rats, because the reduced renal NOS expression promotes salt sensitivity. DS rats and Dahl salt-resistant (DR) rats were fed a high sodium diet (8.0% NaCl) for 3 weeks. The high sodium diet resulted in an increase in blood pressure and a reduction of urinary sodium excretion in association with increased renal adrenomedullin concentrations and decreased expression of renal neuronal NOS (nNOS) and renal medullary endothelial NOS (eNOS) in DS rats compared with DR rats. Chronic adrenomedullin infusion partly inhibited the increase of blood pressure and proteinuria in association with a restoration of renal nNOS and medullary eNOS expression in DS rats under the high sodium diet. The immunohistochemical analysis revealed that the restored renal nNOS expression induced by chronic adrenomedullin infusion may reflect the restoration of nNOS expression in the macula densa and inner medullary collecting duct. These results suggest that adrenomedullin infusion has beneficial effects on this hypertension probably in part through restored renal NOS expression in DS rats.  相似文献   

9.
A group of 44 patients with chronic glomerulonephritis (GN) and 20 healthy subjects were investigated under the conditions of normal dietary NaCl intake and after one week of salt load with a daily addition of 5 g NaCl per os. After the salt load, the mean blood pressure increased significantly in 47% subjects (salt-sensitive) and their natriuretic response was accompanied by an increase of glomerular filtration rate. The rates of ouabain-sensitive (OST) and furosemide-sensitive transport (FST) were decreased in patients with chronic GN even before salt loading which did not change these values. The lower OST rate can be explained by a reduced affinity for internal Na+. A decreased affinity of the Na(+)-K+ cotransport system for internal Na+ was detected only in hypertensive GN patients. In our study, no relationship between salt-sensitivity and red cell sodium transport either in normotensive or in hypertensive GN patients was found.  相似文献   

10.
Renal medullary hypoxia‐inducible factor (HIF)‐1α and its target genes, such as haem oxygenase and nitric oxide synthase, have been indicated to play an important role in the regulation of sodium excretion and blood pressure. HIF prolyl hydroxylase domain‐containing proteins (PHDs) are major enzymes to promote the degradation of HIF‐1α. We recently reported that high salt intake suppressed the renal medullary PHD2 expression and thereby activated HIF‐1α‐mediated gene regulation in the renal medulla in response to high salt. To further define the functional role of renal medullary PHD2 in the regulation of renal adaptation to high salt intake and the longer term control of blood pressure, we transfected PHD2 expression plasmids into the renal medulla in uninephrectomized rats and determined its effects on pressure natriuresis, sodium excretion after salt overloading and the long‐term control of arterial pressure after high salt challenge. It was shown that overexpression of PHD2 transgene increased PHD2 levels and decreased HIF‐1α levels in the renal medulla, which blunted pressure natriuresis, attenuated sodium excretion, promoted sodium retention and produced salt sensitive hypertension after high salt challenge compared with rats treated with control plasmids. There was no blood pressure change in PHD2‐treated rats that were maintained in low salt diet. These results suggested that renal medullary PHD2 is an important regulator in renal adaptation to high salt intake and a deficiency in PHD2‐mediated molecular adaptation in response to high salt intake in the renal medulla may represent a pathogenic mechanism producing salt sensitive hypertension.  相似文献   

11.
Complex interactions between genes and environment result in a sodium-induced elevation in blood pressure (salt sensitivity) and/or hypertension that lead to significant morbidity and mortality affecting up to 25% of the middle-aged adult population worldwide. Determining the etiology of genetic and/or environmentally-induced high blood pressure has been difficult because of the many interacting systems involved. Two main pathways have been implicated as principal determinants of blood pressure since they are located in the kidney (the key organ responsible for blood pressure regulation), and have profound effects on sodium balance: the dopaminergic and renin–angiotensin systems. These systems counteract or modulate each other, in concert with a host of intracellular second messenger pathways to regulate sodium and water balance. In particular, the G protein-coupled receptor kinase type 4 (GRK4) appears to play a key role in regulating dopaminergic-mediated natriuresis. Constitutively activated GRK4 gene variants (R65L, A142V, and A486V), by themselves or by their interaction with other genes involved in blood pressure regulation, are associated with essential hypertension and/or salt-sensitive hypertension in several ethnic groups. GRK4γ ?142V?transgenic mice are hypertensive on normal salt intake while GRK4γ? 486V? transgenic mice develop hypertension only with an increase in salt intake. GRK4 gene variants have been shown to hyperphosphorylate, desensitize, and internalize two members of the dopamine receptor family, the D1 (D1R) and D3 (D3R) dopamine receptors, but also increase the expression of a key receptor of the renin–angiotensin system, the angiotensin type 1 receptor (AT1R). Knowledge of the numerous blood pressure regulatory pathways involving angiotensin and dopamine may provide new therapeutic approaches to the pharmacological regulation of sodium excretion and ultimately blood pressure control.  相似文献   

12.
Aldosterone has been recognized as an important sodium retaining hormone for many years. Recently we have demonstrated that angiotensin II has a much more powerful antinatriuretic effect than that of aldosterone. The importance of angiotensin II in regulation of sodium excretion has been observed in experiments in which angiotensin II has been infused intravenously or into the renal artery in acute and chronic situations, and in studies involving blockade of angiotensin II formation. In other experiments we have studied the effects of changes in renal perfusion pressure on sodium excretion. While earlier work by others indicated that an acute 10 mm Hg increase in perfusion pressure would increase sodium excretion 60%-70% we observed that a chronic 10 mm Hg change in perfusion pressure would result in a 300% change in sodium excretion. In view of evidence suggesting that changes in the ability of the kidney to excrete sodium normally at normal arterial pressure is an important element in hypertension we studied the effects of aldosterone and angiotensin II on arterial pressure regulation in normal dogs. High physiological levels of each hormone were infused intravenously for several weeks. Both produced sustained hypertension. Aldosterone hypertension was a typical volume loading type with sodium retention, increased blood volume and extracellular fluid volume and a slow rise in arterial pressure. Angiotensin hypertension was a typical vasoconstrictor type with high peripheral resistance, normal or decreased blood volume, decreased cardiac output, a rapid rise in arterial pressure and only initial sodium retention.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The importance of excess salt intake in the pathogenesis of hypertension is widely recognized. Blood pressure is controlled primarily by salt and water balance because of the infinite gain property of the kidney to rapidly eliminate excess fluid and salt. Up to fifty percent of patients with essential hypertension are salt-sensitive, as manifested by a rise in blood pressure with salt loading. We conducted a two-stage genetic analysis in hypertensive patients very accurately phenotyped for their salt-sensitivity. All newly discovered never treated before, essential hypertensives underwent an acute salt load to monitor the simultaneous changes in blood pressure and renal sodium excretion. The first stage consisted in an association analysis of genotyping data derived from genome-wide array on 329 subjects. Principal Component Analysis demonstrated that this population was homogenous. Among the strongest results, we detected a cluster of SNPs located in the first introns of PRKG1 gene (rs7897633, p = 2.34E-05) associated with variation in diastolic blood pressure after acute salt load. We further focused on two genetic loci, SLC24A3 and SLC8A1 (plasma membrane sodium/calcium exchange proteins, NCKX3 and NCX1, respectively) with a functional relationship with the previous gene and associated to variations in systolic blood pressure (the imputed rs3790261, p = 4.55E-06; and rs434082, p = 4.7E-03). In stage 2, we characterized 159 more patients for the SNPs in PRKG1, SLC24A3 and SLC8A1. Combined analysis showed an epistatic interaction of SNPs in SLC24A3 and SLC8A1 on the pressure-natriuresis (p interaction = 1.55E-04, p model = 3.35E-05), supporting their pathophysiological link in cellular calcium homeostasis. In conclusions, these findings point to a clear association between body sodium-blood pressure relations and molecules modulating the contractile state of vascular cells through an increase in cytoplasmic calcium concentration.  相似文献   

14.
Heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) is induced in the vasculature in the DOCA-salt model of hypertension in rats. Whereas the HO system and its products may exert vasodilator effects, recent studies have suggested that the HO system may predispose to hypertension. The present study examined the effects of selected components of the HO system, specifically, the HO-1 isozyme and the product bilirubin in the DOCA-salt model of systemic hypertension; the experimental approach employed mutant rodent models, namely, the HO-1(-/-) mouse and the hyperbilirubinemic Gunn rat. DOCA-salt induced HO-1 protein in the aorta in HO-1(+/+) mice and provoked a significant rise in systolic arterial pressure in HO-1(-/-) mice but not in HO-1(+/+) mice; this effect could not be ascribed to impaired urinary sodium excretion or impaired glomerular filtration rate in the DOCA-salt-treated HO-1(-/-) mice. The administration of DOCA salt to uninephrectomized rats significantly increased systolic arterial pressure in wild-type rats, an effect that was attenuated in the mutant Gunn rat; this reduction in systemic hypertension in the DOCA-salt-treated Gunn rat was not due to a greater induction of HO-1 in the vasculature or to a more avid urinary sodium excretion. DOCA-salt impaired endothelium-dependent and endothelium-independent vasorelaxation in wild-type rats but not in Gunn rats; prior exposure to bilirubin repaired the defect in endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation in aortic rings in DOCA-salt-treated rats. DOCA salt stimulated vascular production of superoxide anion in wild-type but not in Gunn rats. We suggest that HO-1 and the product bilirubin may exert a countervailing effect in the DOCA-salt model of systemic hypertension.  相似文献   

15.
ObjectiveTo assess the long term effects of advice to restrict dietary sodium in adults with and without hypertension.DesignSystematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials.OutcomesMortality, cardiovascular events, blood pressure, urinary sodium excretion, quality of life, and use of antihypertensive drugs.ResultsThree trials in normotensive people (n=2326), five trials in those with untreated hypertension (n=387), and three trials in people being treated for hypertension (n=801) were included, with follow up from six months to seven years. The large high quality (and therefore most informative) studies used intensive behavioural interventions. Deaths and cardiovascular events were inconsistently defined and reported. There were 17 deaths, equally distributed between intervention and control groups. Systolic and diastolic blood pressures were reduced (systolic by 1.1 mm Hg, 95% confidence interval 1.8 to 0.4 mm Hg; diastolic by 0.6 mm Hg, 1.5 to −0.3 mm Hg) at 13 to 60 months, as was urinary 24 hour sodium excretion (by 35.5 mmol/24 hours, 47.2 to 23.9). Degree of reduction in sodium intake and change in blood pressure were not related.ConclusionsIntensive interventions, unsuited to primary care or population prevention programmes, provide only small reductions in blood pressure and sodium excretion, and effects on deaths and cardiovascular events are unclear. Advice to reduce sodium intake may help people on antihypertensive drugs to stop their medication while maintaining good blood pressure control.

What is already known on this topic

Restricting sodium intake in people with hypertension reduces blood pressureLong term effects (on blood pressure, mortality, and morbidity) of reduced salt intake in people with and without hypertension are unclear

What this study adds

Few deaths and cardiovascular events have been reported in salt reduction trialsMeta-analysis shows that blood pressure was reduced (systolic by 1.1 mm Hg, diastolic by 0.6 mm Hg) at 13 to 60 months, with a reduction in sodium excretion of almost a quarter (35.5 mmol/24 hours)The interventions used were highly intensive and unsuited to primary care or population prevention programmesLower salt intake may help people on antihypertensive drugs to stop their medication while maintaining good control of blood pressure, but there are doubts about effects of sodium reduction on overall health  相似文献   

16.
Factors that mediate increases in salt sensitivity of blood pressure with age remain to be clarified. The present study investigated 1) the effects of high-NaCl intake on two Na pump inhibitors, endogenous ouabain (EO) and marinobufagenin (MBG), in middle-aged and older normotensive Caucasian women; and 2) whether individual differences in EO and MBG are linked to variations in sodium excretion or salt sensitivity. A change from 6 days of a lower (0.7 mmol.kg(-1).day(-1))- to 6 days of a higher (4 mmol.kg(-1).day(-1))-NaCl diet elicited a sustained increase in MBG excretion that directly correlated with an increase in the fractional Na excretion and was inversely related to age and to an age-dependent increase in salt sensitivity. In contrast, EO excretion increased only transiently in response to NaCl loading and did not vary with age or correlate with fractional Na excretion or salt sensitivity. A positive correlation of both plasma and urine levels of EO and MBG during salt loading may indicate a casual link between two Na pump inhibitors in response to NaCl loading, as observed in animal models. A linear mixed-effects model demonstrated that age, dietary NaCl, renal MBG excretion, and body mass index were each independently associated with systolic blood pressure. Thus, a sustained increase in MBG in response to acutely elevated dietary NaCl is inversely linked to salt sensitivity in normotensive middle-aged and older women, and a relative failure of MBG elaboration by these older persons may be involved in the increased salt sensitivity with advancing age.  相似文献   

17.
A family of orphan transporters has been discovered that are structurally related to the Na(+)-Cl(-)-dependent neurotransmitter transporters, including the dopamine transporter. One member of this family, the mouse XT2 gene, is predominantly expressed in the kidney and has 95% homology to rat ROSIT (renal osmotic stress-induced Na(+)-Cl(-) organic solute cotransporter). To study the physiological functions of this transporter, we generated XT2-knockout mice by gene targeting. XT2(-/-) mice develop and survive normally with no apparent abnormalities. To attempt to identify potential substrates for XT2, we screened urine from XT2-knockout mice by high-pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry and found significantly elevated concentrations of glycine. To study glycine handling, XT2(+/+) and XT2(-/-) mice were injected with radiolabeled glycine, and urine samples were collected to monitor glycine excretion. After 2 h, XT2(-/-) mice were found to excrete almost twice as much glycine as the XT2(+/+) controls (P = 0.03). To determine whether the absence of the XT2 transporter affected sodium and fluid homeostasis, we measured systolic blood pressure by computerized tail-cuff manometry. Systolic blood pressure was significantly higher in XT2(-/-) mice (127 +/- 3 mmHg) than in wild-type controls (114 +/- 2 mmHg; P < 0.001). This difference in systolic blood pressure was maintained on high and low salt feeding. To examine whether the alteration in blood pressure and the defect in glycine handling were related, we measured systolic blood pressure in the XT2(-/-) mice during dietary glycine supplementation. Glycine loading caused systolic blood pressure to fall in the XT2(-/-) mice from 127 +/- 3 to 115 +/- 3 mmHg (P < 0.001), a level virtually identical to that of the wild-type controls. These data suggest that the XT2 orphan transporter is involved in glycine reabsorption and that the absence of this transporter is sufficient to cause hypertension.  相似文献   

18.
Endogenous cardiotonic steroids (CTS), also called digitalis like factors, have been postulated to play important roles in pathogenesis of hypertension for nearly half of a century. For the past 50 years biomedical scientists have been in quest of an unidentified factor or hormone that both increases blood pressure and renal sodium excretion; this “natriuretic hormone” was, in fact, postulated to interact with the Na/K-ATPase. Recent discoveries have led to the identification of steroid molecules which are present in humans, rodents and amphibians, and which, in a complex manner, interact with each other and with the other systems that regulate renal salt handling and contribute to the salt-sensitivity of blood pressure.Recent findings include the specific identification of endogenous cardenolide (endogenous ouabain) and bufadienolide (marinobufagenin) CTS in humans along with the delineation of mechanisms by which CTS can signal through the Na/K-ATPase. Although CTS were first considered important in the regulation of renal sodium transport and arterial pressure, more recent work implicates these hormones in the central regulation of blood pressure and regulation of cell growth, and development of cardiovascular and renal fibrosis in particular.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of synthetic Atrial Natriuretic Factor (ANF) on urine flow rate, sodium excretion, potassium excretion and arterial blood pressure were studied in 10-12 days-old female calves. In four female calves fitted with a Foley catheter, an intravenous administration of ANF (Ile-ANF 26; 1.6 micrograms/kg body wt during 30 min) induced an increase (P less than 0.01) in urine flow rate (from 1.8 +/- 0.2 to 12.8 +/- 1.1 ml/min), sodium excretion (from 0.15 +/- 0.02 to 0.81 +/- 0.06 mmol/min) and free water clearance (from 0.13 +/- 0.9 to 5.16 +/- 0.5 ml/min). It had no significant effect on potassium excretion. In four calves chronically-instrumented with a carotid catheter, an intravenous administration of synthetic ANF alone (1.6 micrograms/kg body wt during 30 min) induced a gradual decrease (P less than 0.01) in systolic, diastolic and mean arterial blood pressure (from 112 +/- 4 to 72, from 72 +/- 2 to 61 +/- 1 and from 90 +/- 2 to 65 +/- 2 mmHg respectively, at the end of ANF infusion). An intravenous administration of angiotensin II (AII) (0.5 micrograms/kg body wt during 45 min) induced a significant increase in systolic, diastolic and mean arterial blood pressure which was antagonized by an i.v. bolus injection of ANF (0.125 micrograms/kg body wt). However, during a simultaneous administration of AII (0.3 micrograms/kg body wt during 30 min) and ANF (1.6 micrograms/kg body wt. during 30 min), the atrial peptide did not influence the pressure action of AII. These findings indicate that the conscious newborn calf is sensitive to diuretic, natriuretic and hypotensive effects of synthetic ANF.  相似文献   

20.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a risk factor for hypertension. Previously, we demonstrated that an established mouse model of SLE (female NZBWF1 mice) develops hypertension with renal inflammation and oxidative stress, both characteristics known as contributing mechanisms to the development of salt-sensitive hypertension. On the basis of this model, we hypothesized that blood pressure in SLE mice would be salt-sensitive. Thirty-week-old female SLE and control mice (NZW/LacJ) were fed 8% high-salt (HS) diet or normal diet (0.4% salt) for 4 wk. Plasma levels of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) autoantibodies, a marker of SLE disease activity, were increased in SLE mice compared with controls (472 ± 148 vs. 57 ± 17 U/ml × 1,000, P < 0.001). HS did not alter dsDNA autoantibody levels in SLE or control mice. Mean arterial pressure was increased in SLE mice compared with controls (132 ± 3 vs. 118 ± 2 mmHg, P < 0.001) and was not significantly altered by the HS diet in either group. Similarly, albuminuria was higher in SLE mice compared with controls (10.7 ± 9.0 vs. 0.3 ± 0.1 mg/day) but was not significantly increased in SLE or control mice fed a HS diet. In summary, blood pressure during SLE is not salt-sensitive, and the HS diet did not adversely affect SLE disease activity or significantly augment albuminuria. These data suggest that renal inflammation and oxidative stress, characteristics common to both SLE and models of salt-sensitive hypertension, may have diverging mechanistic roles in the development of hypertension.  相似文献   

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