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Showing papers by "Joseph L. Izzo published in 1979"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Urinary kallikrein is an index of sodium-retaining steroid activity and may participate in the antinatriuretic and kaliuretic effects of these hormones.
Abstract: Sodium-retaining steroids increase urinary kallikrein but their effects on urinary kinins and plasma bradykinin are not known. Thirty-six normal subjects were studied during several different manipulations of dietary sodium and potassium or the administration of fludrocortisone or adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). Urinary kallikrein and aldosterone excretion changed pari passu over a 30-fold range for kallikrein and an 80-fold range for aldosterone. Urinary kinin excretion was invariant. Plasma, bradykinin, on the other hand, responded to the same stimuli as plasma renin activity and not primarily to the level of sodium-retaining steroid. These studies show that: (1) urinary kallikrein is dependent on the level of aldosterone over a wide range of excretion values; (2) urinary kallikrein determines neither the level of urinary kinins nor the level of plasma kinins; (3) urinary kinins are independent of the level of sodium-retaining steroid; and (4) there is a strong correlation between plasma bradykinin and renin activity but not between plasma bradykinin and sodium-retaining steroid activty. We suggest that: (1) urinary kallikrein is an index of sodium-retaining steroid activity and may participate in the antinatriuretic and kaliuretic effects of these hormones; (2) plasma bradykinin is highly correlated with plasma renin activity because both responded to changes in extracellular fluid volume and not because angiotensin-converting enzyme controls both systems in an interrelated fashion; and (3) plasma bradykinin may act physiologically to antagonize angiotensin II and may contribute to maintenance of normal blood pressure in hyperreninemic states. cire Res 44:228-237,1979

87 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data suggest that intraportally injected 125I-labeled insulin is rapidly internalized and concentrated in the rat liver microsomes and presumptive evidence suggesting that the sequential degradative pathway is operative in vivo.

24 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The norepinephrine metabolites methoxyhydroxyphenyl glycol (MHPG) and vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) were measured in the urine of hypertensive subjects before and during adminstration of guanethidine, a peripheral sympatholytic agent which does not cross the blood-brain barrier or deplete adrenal catecholamines.

17 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: Levels of plasma bradykinin are highly correlated with levels of plasma renin activity probably because both respond to changes in extracellular fluid volume and may act to antagonize angiotensin II to maintain normal blood pressure in hyper-reninemic states.
Abstract: In these studies we have shown that: 1. urinary kallikrein is an index of sodium-retaining steroid activity and may participate in the anti-natriuretic and kaliuretic effects of these hormones; 2. urinary kinin excretion is independent of changes in urinary kallikrein excretion; 3. levels of plasma bradykinin are highly correlated with levels of plasma renin activity probably because both respond to changes in extracellular fluid volume; and, 4. plasma bradykinin may act to antagonize angiotensin II to maintain normal blood pressure in hyper-reninemic states.

8 citations