Water immersion and salt-sensitivity in essential hypertension.

Category Primary study
JournalScandinavian journal of clinical and laboratory investigation
Year 1993
It has been demonstrated that an exaggerated natriuretic response to central hypervolaemia is not necessarily associated with hypertension; many hypertensive subjects manifest either an appropriate or a blunted natriuresis in response to ECFV expansion attained by head-out water immersion. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that an underlying condition of salt-sensitivity may explain the heterogeneity of the natriuretic response of essential hypertension. Both salt-sensitivity tests and 2h water-immersion studies were randomly performed in 18 untreated essential hypertensives under a selected and controlled diet. Salt-sensitivity was defined as a significant drop in mean arterial pressure of 10% or greater, calculated as the difference between the average of the 25 readings under the high and the low salt period. Water immersion did result in a significant natriuretic and calciuretic response in the whole hypertensive group (n = 18, p < 0.001 and p < 0.05, respectively), while the examination of the individual excretion disclosed either exaggerated and appropriate or blunted urinary response. When the hypertensive group was classified in relation to salt-sensitivity, the greater fall in mean arterial pressure during low salt diet (salt-sensitivity) was associated with the more pronounced natriuretic response during water immersion (r = -0.66, p < 0.003). An identical correlation (r = -0.58, p < 0.01) was also found between changes in mean arterial pressure (low salt diet) and urinary calcium excretion (water immersion) in the same hypertensives. The water immersion-induced suppression of plasma aldosterone and the increase in plasma atrial natriuretic peptide did result from comparable magnitude in the salt-sensitive and in salt-resistant subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Epistemonikos ID: 3ca11659bebb7e840ae06fd121400d9157f78d01
First added on: Sep 11, 2023