Role of a Natriuretic Factor in Essential Hypertension: An Hypothesis
Abstract
Excessive dietary intake of sodium appears to play a significant role in human essential hypertension. The underlying mechanism may involve the excessive secretion of a humoral natriuretic factor in response to the salt load. Deproteinized plasma from patients with essential hypertension contains elevated levels of an ouabain-like inhibitor of dog kidney sodium plus potassium-dependent adenosine triphosphatase. This substance, by inhibiting renal sodium transport, should have a natriuretic effect. Plasma from hypertensive patients also produces an ouabain-like sensitization of vascular smooth muscle (rabbit aorta) to exogenous norepinephrine. These data suggest that a circulating inhibitor of the sodium pump may play a key role in generating increased peripheral vascular resistance. Cellular mechanisms that link sodium pump inhibition to increased vascular resistance involve increased norepinephrine release and reduced re-uptake and directly increased smooth muscle contractility and reactivity, as a result of increased cell sodium.
Article and Author Information
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▸From the Department of Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine; Baltimore, Maryland.
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Grant support: In part by grant NS-16106 from the National Institutes of Health, grant PCM-79-11704 from the National Science Foundation, a grant from the Muscular Dystrophy Association, and a fellowship from the Maryland Chapter of the American Heart Association.
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▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Mordecai P. Blaustein, M.D.; Department of Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 655 W. Baltimore Street; Baltimore, MD 21201.
- © 1983 American College of Physicians
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