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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

23Na Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Determined Tissue Sodium in Healthy Subjects and Hypertensive Patients

TLDR
23Na magnetic resonance imaging could have utility in assessing the role of tissue Na+ storage for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in longitudinal studies, and it is suggested that patients with refractory hypertension had increased tissueNa+ content, compared with normotensive controls.
Abstract
High dietary salt intake is associated with hypertension; the prevalence of salt-sensitive hypertension increases with age. We hypothesized that tissue Na(+) might accumulate in hypertensive patients and that aging might be accompanied by Na(+) deposition in tissue. We implemented (23)Na magnetic resonance imaging to measure Na(+) content of soft tissues in vivo earlier, but had not studied essential hypertension. We report on a cohort of 56 healthy control men and women, and 57 men and women with essential hypertension. The ages ranged from 22 to 90 years. (23)Na magnetic resonance imaging measurements were made at the level of the calf. We observed age-dependent increases in Na(+) content in muscle in men, whereas muscle Na(+) content did not change with age in women. We estimated water content with conventional MRI and found no age-related increases in muscle water in men, despite remarkable Na(+) accumulation, indicating water-free Na(+) storage in muscle. With increasing age, there was Na(+) deposition in the skin in both women and men; however, skin Na(+) content remained lower in women. Similarly, this sex difference was found in skin water content, which was lower in women than in men. In contrast to muscle, increasing Na(+) content was paralleled with increasing skin water content. When controlled for age, we found that patients with refractory hypertension had increased tissue Na(+) content, compared with normotensive controls. These observations suggest that (23)Na magnetic resonance imaging could have utility in assessing the role of tissue Na(+) storage for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in longitudinal studies.

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Sodium Intake and Chronic Kidney Disease.

TL;DR: LSD is, therefore, a rational and basic tool to correct fluid overload and hypertension in all CKD stages and should be personalized, similarly to diuretic treatment, keeping into account the volume status and true burden of hypertension evaluated by ambulatory BP monitoring.
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Elevated sodium leads to the increased expression of HSP60 and induces apoptosis in HUVECs

TL;DR: It is shown that increasing levels of sodium chloride can also induce an increase in intracellular and surface expression of HSP60 protein in human umbilical vein endothelial cells, and it is found that elevated sodium induces apoptosis.
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Cardioprotective effects of SGLT2 inhibitors are possibly associated with normalization of the circadian rhythm of blood pressure.

TL;DR: Improvement in cardiovascular (CV) morbidity and mortality in the EMPA-REG OUTCOME study provides new insight into the therapeutic use of sodium-dependent glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors in patients with type 2 diabetes.
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Inherited salt-losing tubulopathies are associated with immunodeficiency due to impaired IL-17 responses

TL;DR: It is shown that the ionic environment typical in SLT impairs IL-17 immunity, but the intracellular pathways that mediate salt-driven Th17 polarisation are intact and in vitro IL- 17 responses can be reinvigorated by increasing extracellular sodium concentration.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of Hypertension in the US Adult Population: Results From the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988-1991

TL;DR: awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension have improved substantially since the 1976-1980 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey but continue to be suboptimal, especially in Mexican Americans.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Molecular Mechanisms of Human Hypertension

TL;DR: Supported in part by a Specialized Center of Research in Hypertension and NIH K08 awards (to A. G. and D. S. G.) and a grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
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Salt Sensitivity, Pulse Pressure, and Death in Normal and Hypertensive Humans

TL;DR: Long-term follow-up of normotensive salt-sensitive subjects in whom assessment of salt sensitivity of blood pressure was performed as long as 27 years ago provides unique evidence of a relationship between salt sensitivity and mortality that is independent of elevated blood pressure.
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Fat and water magnetic resonance imaging.

TL;DR: This article reviews the most commonly used techniques for fat suppression and fat–water imaging including 1) chemically selective fat suppression pulses “FAT‐SAT”; 2) spatial‐spectral pulses (water excitation); 3) short inversion time (TI) inversion recovery (STIR) imaging; 4) chemical shift based water–fat separation methods; and finally 5)Fat suppression and balanced steady‐state free precession (SSFP) sequences.
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