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Relation of renin status to neurogenic vascular resistance in borderline hypertension.
Authors:M D Esler  S Julius  O S Randall  C N Ellis  T Kashima
Institution:From the Hypertension Section, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Mich. USA
Abstract:The relation of renin-angiotensin status to general hemodynamics and to neurogenic vascular resistance was studied in patients with border-line hypertension. Plasma renin activity during standing was referred to a standard renin-urinary sodium nomogram derived from 18 normal subjects. Among 22 patients with borderline hypertension the renin level was high in 8, low in 4 and within normal limits in the remaining 10. In patients with borderline hypertension and high or normal levels of plasma renin activity, the blood pressure elevation was due to increased total peripheral vascular resistance. In contrast, in patients with low renin borderline hypertension, total peripheral resistance was not significantly elevated; the blood pressure elevation reflected a cardiac index 12 percent higher than that in normal subjects. The neurogenic contribution to total peripheral vascular resistance was assessed by studying the effects of alpha adrenergic blockade with phentolamine, after prior autonomic blockade of the heart with atropine (0.04 mg/kg body weight) and propranolol (0.2 mg/kg). Phentolamine (15 mg) produced an immediate reduction in total peripheral resistance of 12.0 +/- 6.7 percent in patients with high renin borderline hypertension (P less than 0.01) but no change in normal subjects or those with borderline hypertension and normal or low renin levels. Normalization of the blood pressure followed "total" autonomic blockade with atropine, propranolol or phentolamine only in patients with high renin borderline hypertension. It is concluded from these preliminary data that in high renin borderline hypertension the blood pressure elevation is sustained by neurogenic mechanisms. The elevated renin level in these patients is probably an expression of increased sympathetic nervous activity. Although the elevated plasma renin level may possibly be contributing to the generation of higher sympathetic tone, or data do not support a direct role of circulating angiotensin in the maintenance of the elevated vascular resistance.
Keywords:Address for reprints: Murray Esler  PhD  Hypertension Section  Department of Internal Medicine  University of Michigan Medical Center  Ann Arbor  Mich  48104  
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