Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Ann Intern Med. 1983 May;98(5 Pt 2):785-92.

    Role of a natriuretic factor in essential hypertension: an hypothesis.

    Blaustein MP, Hamlyn JM.

    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.

    PMID: 6682639 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content

    Patient drug information

    • Potassium (Glu-K®, K+ 10®, K+ 8®, ...)

      Potassium is essential for the proper functioning of the heart, kidneys, muscles, nerves, and digestive system. Usually the food you eat supplies all of the potassium you need. However, certain diseases (e.g., kidney dis...