The Determinants of Plasma-Renin Activity in Essential Hypertension

  1. MURRAY ESLER, F.R.A.C.P., Ph.D.;
  2. ANDREW ZWEIFLER, M.D., F.A.C.P.;
  3. OTELIO RANDALL, M.D.;
  4. STEVO JULIUS, M.D., SC.D; and
  5. VINCENT DeQUATTRO, M.D.
  1. Ann Arbor, Michigan; and Los Angeles, California

    Abstract

    Plasma-renin activity was studied, under different conditions of stimulation, in normal subjects and patients with essential hypertension. In normal subjects, three components of renin release, "basal," "neural," and "sodium-sensitive," could be delineated. Among the hypertensive patients, abnormal patterns of renin release were noted. The categorization of patients according to "plasma-renin status," however, differed with the conditions of testing, being dependent both on the pathophysiology of the essential hypertension and the character of the renin-releasing stimulus, specifically whether this stimulus elevated plasma-renin activity through a predominantly neural (upright posture) or non-neural mechanism (dietary sodium deprivation). Abnormal plasma-renin activity in essential hypertension resulted in part from disordered sympathetic nervous system function. Patients with mild hypertension and elevated plasma-renin activity exhibited increased neural stimulation of renin release, whereas in patients with low plasma-renin values, all three components of renin release, including the neural element, were diminished.

    Article and Author Information

    • ▸From the Division of Hypertension, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Medical Center; Ann Arbor, Michigan; and the Department of Medicine, University of Southern California Medical Center; Los Angeles, California.

    • ▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Murray Esler, F.R.A.C.P., Ph.D.; Baker Medical Research Institute; Commercial Road; Prahran, 3181, Victoria, Australia.

      • Received June 1, 1977.
      • Accepted February 20, 1978.
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