Effects of Guanethidine and Methyldopa on a Standardized Test for Renin Responsiveness

  1. STEPHEN C. LOWDER, M.D.; and
  2. GRANT W. LIDDLE, M.D., F.A.C.P.
  1. Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and Nashville, Tennessee

    Abstract

    A standardized test for renin responsiveness, employing the dual stimulus of upright posture and the loop diuretic furosemide, was applied to 19 hypertensive patients in the untreated state and during therapy with the antihypertensive agents guanethidine and methyldopa. During therapy with guanethidine, 6 of 10 patients with "low-renin essential hypertension" experienced elevations of plasma renin activity to levels ordinarily diagnostic of "normal-renin" hypertension (P < 0.05), whereas methyldopa had no significant effect on plasma renin activity in either "low-renin" or "normal-renin" patients. It is suggested that methyldopa has a negligible influence on renin responsiveness when stimulated under the above conditions and that it may be used during assessment of plasma renin activity in hypertensive patients whose blood pressure is too severely elevated for temporary withdrawal of therapy.

    Article and Author Information

    • ▸From the Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee.

    • Grant support: in part by grants 5-T01-AM-05092, 5-P17-HL-14192, and 5-M01-RR-95 from the National Institutes of Health, United States Public Health Service.

    • ▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Stephen C. Lowder, M.D., Department of Internal Medicine, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Winston-Salem NC 27103.

      • Received October 16, 1974.
      • Accepted March 7, 1975.
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