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Journal ArticleDOI

Intrarenal Pressure and Exaggerated Natriuresis in Essential Hypertension

TLDR
Intrarenal pressure, estimated by measurement of wedged renal vein pressure, was elevated in patients with essential hypertension, indicating that the higher systemic pressure in essential hypertension is transmitted beyond the arterioles and accounts for elevation of intrarenal Pressure.
Abstract
1. Intrarenal pressure, estimated by measurement of wedged renal vein pressure, was elevated in patients with essential hypertension. Despite increased afferent arteriolar resistance, glomerular pressure was elevated indicating that the higher systemic pressure in essential hypertension is transmitted beyond the arterioles and accounts for elevation of intrarenal pressure. 2. During hypertonic saline loading in hypertensives, renal arteriolar resistance falls, resulting in further increase in intrarenal pressure. Increments in intrarenal pressure paralleled increases in sodium excretion in patients with essential hypertension during the exaggerated natriuresis and in normotensive subjects after the prolonged infusion of hypertonic saline. 3. The marked increase in intrarenal pressure which appears to be responsible for exaggerated natriuresis in essential hypertension is attributable to an altered (exaggerated) response of the renal arterioles. The data suggest that elevated intrarenal pressure may play a role in the regulation of sodium balance in patients with essential hypertension.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The extra-cellular-matrix in hypertension: the link between renal function, autoregulation and sodium metabolism, a review and hypothesis.

TL;DR: The nature of the extra-cellular-matrix (ECM) is outlined briefly and significant and widespread changes occur in the ECM in hypertensive states, which may alter the characteristics of the renal perfusion pressure/sodium excretion curve, autoregulation and sodium metabolism.
Book ChapterDOI

Determinants of Exaggerated Natriuresis in Arterial Hypertension

TL;DR: The “exaggerated natriuresis” appears to be influenced by various extra-renal factors in addition to elevated arterial blood pressure, and in labile hypertensives, natriuretic responses following sodium administration may be related to sympathetic tone.
Journal ArticleDOI

[Plasma renin activity, plasma volume extracellular fluid volume and cardiac output in essential hypertension (author's transl)].

TL;DR: It can be concluded that the essential hypertensive patients with low PRA are not an homogeneous group and it is assumed that in a subgroup the elevated blood pressure may be the cause of the renin suppression.
Dissertation

Transforming growth factor beta 1 : role in the progression of chronic renal failure

TL;DR: There was a highly significant correlation between the degree of cellular infiltration in renal tissues and tubular TGF-beta1 immunostaining and the severity of glomerulosclerosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

What causes oedema

Peter C. Harris
- 28 May 1988 - 
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