Vasodysfunction That Involves Renal Vasodysfunction, Not Abnormally Increased Renal Retention of Sodium, Accounts for the Initiation of Salt-Induced Hypertension
Prevailing theory holds that abnormally large increases in renal salt retention and cardiac output are early pathophysiologic events mediating initiation of most instances of salt-induced hypertension. This theory has come under increasing scrutiny because it is based on studies that lack measuremen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Circulation (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2016-03, Vol.133 (9), p.881-893 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Prevailing theory holds that abnormally large increases in renal salt
retention and cardiac output are early pathophysiologic events mediating
initiation of most instances of salt-induced hypertension. This theory has come
under increasing scrutiny because it is based on studies that lack measurements
of sodium balance and cardiac output obtained during initiation of salt-loading
in proper normal controls, i.e., salt-resistant subjects with normal blood
pressure. Here we make the case for a “vasodysfunction” theory
for initiation of salt-induced hypertension: In response to an increase in salt intake, a subnormal decrease in total peripheral resistance that involves a subnormal decrease in renal vascular resistance,
in the absence of abnormally large increases in sodium retention and cardiac output
, is the hemodynamic abnormality that usually mediates initiation of salt-induced increases in blood pressure (BP). It is the failure to normally decrease
vascular resistance in response to salt loading that enables a normal increase
of cardiac output to initiate the salt-induced increase in blood pressure. This
theory is based on the results of properly controlled studies which consistently
demonstrate that in salt-sensitive subjects, salt-loading initiates increased BP
through a hemodynamic mechanism that: 1) does not usually involve early
increases in sodium retention and cardiac output greater than those which occur
with salt-loading in normal controls, and 2) usually involves an early failure
to decrease vascular resistance to the same extent as that observed during
salt-loading in normal controls. Multiple mechanisms including disturbances in
nitric oxide and sympathetic nervous system activity likely underlie this
subnormal vasodilatory response to salt that usually precedes and initiates
salt-induced hypertension. |
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ISSN: | 0009-7322 1524-4539 |
DOI: | 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.017923 |