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Effects of atrial natriuretic peptide on systemic and renal hemodynamics and renal excretory function in patients with chronic renal failure
Authors:H. Meyer-Lehnert  T. Bayer  H. -G. Predel  K. Glänzer  H. J. Kramer
Affiliation:(1) Medizinische Universitäts-Poliklinik Bonn, Deutschland
Abstract:Summary We examined the effects of 60 minagr-hANP infusion (24 ng/min/kg) on glomerular filtration rate (GFR), renal blood flow (RBF), cardiac index (CI) and blood pressure (BP) in 8 patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) with GFR ranging from 18 to 80 ml/min/1.73 m2 and in 8 control (C) subjects with normal renal function. Basal plasma levels of ANP and cGMP were elevated in CRF (ANP: 60.6±9.1 vs 13.6±1.9 pmol/l,p<0.05; cGMP: 14.3±2.9 vs 6.6±1.1 pmol/ml,p<0.05). During ANP infusion, peak levels of cGMP were higher in CRF than in C (27.5±3.2 vs. 17.3±1.3 pmol/ml,p<0.05). During ANP infusion, GFR increased in CRF by 70.7±4.2% from 34.5±6.8 to 57.4±9.9 ml/min/1.73m2 (p<0.001) as compared to 16.2±1.4% in C (p<0.001 vs CRF). RBF increased in CRF by 43.6±6.4% and in C by 3.1±1.2% (p<0.01). Basal urinary sodium excretion (UNaV) was slightly lower in CRF than in C but rose to the same level in both groups during ANP infusion. In CRF, as opposed to C, UNaV remained elevated above baseline after the end of the infusion. The effect of ANP on fractional sodium excretion (FENa), however, was more pronounced in C. Basal FENa was higher in CRF (12.8±2.5% vs 2.4±1.5% in C,p<0.001), FENa remained elevated at 180% over baseline in C sixty minutes after cessation of ANP infusion, while it had returned to baseline in CRF. During ANP infusion, CI increased in CRF after 30 min from 2.91±0.08 to 3.12±0.091/min/m2 (p<0.001) and in C from 3.20±0.11 to 3.39±0.13 l/min/m2 (p< 0.05). Mean arterial BP was higher in CRF and its decrease was greater than in C (21.1±2.7% vs 9.1±1.0%,p<0.001). In patients with CRF GFR, RPF, and CI remained significantly elevated and BP was still significantly decreased 60 min after ANP infusion. Total peripheral vascular resistance (TPR) was elevated in CRF and declined during ANP infusion in both CRF and C. The decline of TPR was sustained and more pronounced in CRF than in C. Renal vascular resistance (RVR) was high in CRF and dropped by nearly 50% during ANP infusion, whereas only a moderate decline in RVR during ANP application was observed in C. Thus, exogenous ANP had greater and prolonged effects on systemic hemodynamics and renal function in CRF than in C. They may be due to higher levels of ANP following ANP infusion and appear to be mediated by a more sustained formation of the second messenger cGMP.Abbreviations ANP atrial natriuretic peptide - CRF chronic renal failure; - GFR glomerular filtration rate - FF filtration fraction - ERPF effective renal plasma flow - ERBF effective renal blood flow - BP blood pressure - MAP mean arterial blood pressure - HR heart rate - SV stroke volume - CO cardiac output - CI cardiac index - TPR total peripheral resistance - RVR renal vascular resistance - UNaV urinary sodium excretion - FENa fractional sodium excretion - PRA plasma renin activity - ECFV extracellular fluid volume - PAH paminohippuric acidDedicated to Prof. Dr. med. F. Krück on the occasion of his 70th birthday
Keywords:ANP  Renal failure  Hemodynamics  Renal function  Sodium homeostasis  Renin-aldosterone-axis
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