Relationship between insulin resistance and nonmodulating hypertension: linkage of metabolic abnormalities and cardiovascular risk.

Autor: Ferri C, Bellini C, Desideri G, Valenti M, De Mattia G, Santucci A, Hollenberg NK, Williams GH, Ferri, C, Bellini, C, Desideri, G, Valenti, M, De Mattia, G, Santucci, A, Hollenberg, N K, Williams, G H
Zdroj: Diabetes; Aug99, Vol. 48 Issue 8, p1623-1630, 8p
Abstrakt: Insulin resistance is a feature common to patients with diabetes and to some with hypertension. It is assumed that this feature confers the increased metabolic risk in hypertension. However, the state of the renin-angiotensin system might contribute to cardiovascular risk, although there is no clear mechanistic explanation. Our recent observation that insulin levels are increased in a specific subset of patients with normal/high-renin hypertension, the nonmodulators, provided the background for the current hypothesis: to ascertain whether abnormalities in lipid and carbohydrate metabolism are observed in the same patients in whom alterations in sodium transport, sodium homeostasis, and the renin-aniotensin system response have been identified. Exploration of a family history of cardiovascular risk was a secondary goal. Insulin sensitivity (assessed by a 75-g oral glucose load), lipid levels, and two defects in the renin-angiotensin system were assessed in 62 hypertensive and 14 normotensive subjects placed on a high (210 mmol/l) and a low (10 mmol/l) sodium intake for 2 weeks, to classify them as low-renin, nonmodulator, or modulating hypertensive subjects. Only in nonmodulators were the following cardiovascular risk factors significantly increased: fasting insulin (P < 0.01); increment in post-glucose load insulin (P < 0.01); total, LDL, and VLDL cholesterol and triglyceride levels (P < 0.05); and erythrocyte Na+/Li+ countertransport activity (P < 0.001). Both nonmodulators and low-renin hypertensive subjects had a significantly (P < 0.01) increased frequency of a family history of hypertension by questionnaire compared with subjects with intact modulation. However, only nonmodulators had a significantly (P < 0.02) higher frequency of a family history of myocardial infarction. Thus, there is a clustering of metabolic abnormalities in a discrete subset of the essential hypertensive population with a specific dysregulation of the renin-angiotensin system--nonmodulation. The absence of this cluster in low-renin hypertensive subjects may explain their relatively diminished cardiovascular risk. Its presence in nonmodulators likely contributes to the increased cardiovascular risk observed in normal/high-renin hypertension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index