Abstrakt: |
Plasma levels of α-human atrial natriuretic peptide (hANP) were measured in 17 patients with primary hypertension (11 females, 6 males, aged 22-61; blood pressure systolic 154±7 mmHg, diastolic 92±4 mmHg) and in 9 normotensive controls (4 males, 5 females, aged 20-71; blood pressure systolic 117±4 mmHg, diastolic 76±2 mmHg) during unrestricted sodium diet, at the 4th day of a low sodium intake (40-60 mEq/day) and at the 6th day of sodium loading (280-320 mEq/day) both after an overnight rest and after 4 h of upright posture. In the controls, plasma levels of hANP at 8:00 a.m. were lowered from 73±11 to 49±7 pg/ml during low sodium diet and increased to 128±37 pg/ml after high salt intake. Plasma ANP levels were significantly lower after 4 h of upright posture during unrestricted, low and high sodium intake. In the hypertensive group, plasma ANP levels were elevated during unrestricted diet (203±43 pg/ml), during the low sodium period (139±31 pg/ml), and after high sodium intake (267±63 pg/ml) compared to the controls. All levels were lowered by upright posture. The absolute decrease was more pronounced compared to the normotensives, the relative decline was similar in both groups. In the hypertensives, plasma ANP levels significantly correlate with systolic and diastolic blood pressure ( r=0.468, r=0.448, P<0.05) and with urinary aldosterone during unrestricted diet ( r=0.536, P<0.05). There was an inverse correlation between plasma ANP levels and plasma renin concentration during low and high sodium intake ( r=−0.469, r=−0.496, P<0.05). These studies demonstrate raised circulating plasma ANP levels in patients with essential hypertension. The modulation of ANP by different sodium intake and by upright posture is maintained similar to the changes in plasma ANP in normotensive controls. Raised ANP levels in the hypertensives are correlated with low renin secretion and high aldosterone excretion. High ANP levels, therefore, might indicate sodium retention in essential hypertension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |