Effects of ACE inhibition in normotensive patients with chronic glomerular disease and normal renal function |
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Authors: | V Bedogna E Valvo P Casagrande P Braggio C Fontanarosa F Dal Santo D Alberti G Maschio |
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Affiliation: | Divisione di Nefrologia, Istituti Ospitalieri, Verona, Italy. |
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Abstract: | A double-blind, placebo-controlled study was carried out to assess the effects of a three-month treatment with a new ACE inhibitor, Benazepril (BNZ), on systemic and renal hemodynamics, and urine protein excretion, in 20 patients with chronic glomerulonephritis, normal blood pressure (130/83 +/- 16/10 mm Hg), and normal renal function (creatine clearance 106 +/- 25 ml/min). Treatments with placebo or BNZ were assigned randomly. A wide range of proteinuria lowering effect was observed in overall population (from 1 to 84%, average 34%). Following the arbitrary level of a 30% reduction, two well-matched subgroups (10 patients for each one) were obtained: "good responders" (average decrease 51%), and "poor responders" (average decrease 17%). The main distinctive feature between the two groups was a higher plasma renin activity level in good than in poor responders. A positive correlation between the fall in proteinuria and blood pressure was found. Although the decrease in blood pressure seems to represent the major factor in determining the reduction in proteinuria, a multiple correlation analysis showed that the most prominent role (71%) was attributable to the combined decrease in blood pressure and filtration fraction, and then also to the efferent arteriole dilatation. Our conclusion is that ACE inhibitors are capable of also reducing proteinuria in patients with renal disease with normal blood pressure, the effect being more pronounced in those exhibiting humoral, systemic and renal hemodynamic patterns, indicating a greater activity of circulating and renal renin angiotensin system. |
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