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Novel Paradigms of Salt and Hypertension

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JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
卷 28, 期 5, 页码 1362-1369

出版社

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2016080927

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资金

  1. Office of Research and Development, Medical Research Service, Department of Veterans Affairs grant [1 IP1 BX001595]
  2. National Institutes of Health George M. O'Brien Kidney and Urological Research Centers Program [P30 DK079337]
  3. American Heart Association [15SDG25760063]
  4. University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine Multi-PI Grant [AMC21]
  5. Anderson Innovation awards

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Salt resistance/sensitivity refers specifically to the effect of dietary sodium chloride (salt) intake on BP. Increased dietary salt intake promotes an early and uniform expansion of extracellular fluid volume and increased cardiac output. To compensate for these hemodynamic changes and maintain constant BP in salt resistance, renal and peripheral vascular resistance falls and is associated with an increase in production of nitric oxide. In contrast, the decline in peripheral vascular resistance and the increase in nitric oxide are impaired or absent in salt sensitivity, promoting an increase in BP in these individuals. Endothelial dysfunction may pose a particularly significant risk factor in the development of salt sensitivity and subsequent hypertension. Vulnerable salt sensitive populations may have in common underlying endothelial dysfunction due to genetic or environmental influences. These individuals may be very sensitive to the hemodynamic stress of increased effective blood volume, setting in motion untoward molecular and biochemical events that lead to overproduction of TGF-beta, oxidative stress, and limited bioavailable nitric oxide. Finally, chronic high-salt ingestion produces endothelial dysfunction, even in salt-resistant subjects. Thus, the complex syndrome of salt sensitivity may be a function of the endothelium, which is integrally involved in the vascular responses to high salt intake.

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