4.5 Article

Inverse salt sensitivity in normotensive adults: role of demographic factors

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JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION
卷 41, 期 6, 页码 934-940

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LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0000000000003413

关键词

blood pressure; dietary sodium; inverse salt sensitivity; salt sensitivity

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The prevalence of inverse salt sensitivity (ISS; a reduction in blood pressure on a high sodium diet) was determined among healthy normotensive adults and its association with demographic characteristics was investigated. The study found that the prevalence of ISS was 10.7%, with no significant differences based on age or sex, but ISS was more prevalent in individuals with a normal BMI.
Background:Salt sensitivity and inverse salt sensitivity [ISS; a reduction in blood pressure (BP) on a high sodium diet] are each associated with increased incidence of hypertension. The purpose of this analysis was to determine the prevalence of ISS in normotensive adults and whether ISS is associated with any demographic characteristic(s).Methods:Healthy normotensive, nonobese adults [n = 84; 43 women; age = 37 +/- 13 years; baseline mean arterial pressure (MAP) = 89 +/- 8 mmHg] participated in a controlled feeding study, consuming 7-day low-sodium (20 mmol sodium/day) and high-sodium (300 mmol sodium/day) diets. Twenty-four-hour ambulatory BP was assessed on the last day of each diet. ISS was defined as a reduction in 24-h MAP more than 5 mmHg, salt sensitivity as an increase in MAP more than 5 mmHg and salt resistance as a change in MAP between -5 and 5 mmHg from low sodium to high sodium.Results:Using this cutoff, 10.7% were ISS, 76.2% salt resistant, and 13.1% salt sensitive. Prevalence of ISS was similar between sexes and age groups (P > 0.05). However, ISS was more prevalent in those with normal BMI (15.8% ISS) compared with those with overweight BMI (0% ISS; P < 0.01). Interestingly, classification of participants using a salt sensitivity index (Delta MAP/Delta urinary sodium excretion) categorized 21.4% as ISS, 48.8% salt resistant, and 29.8% salt sensitive.Conclusion:Overall, we found that the prevalence of ISS was 10.7% (5 mmHg cutoff) or 21.4% (salt sensitivity index), and that ISS was associated with lower BMI. These results highlight the importance of future work to understand the mechanisms of ISS and to standardize salt sensitivity assessment.

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