Endothelin receptor blockade lowers plasma aldosterone levels via different mechanisms in primary aldosteronism and high-to-normal renin hypertension. (65/516)

BACKGROUND: Endothelin (ET)-1 contributes to raising blood pressure (BP) and inducing cardiovascular disease by vasoconstriction and potent stimulation of aldosterone secretion. In the rat this latter effect occurs via ET(B) receptors; in humans in vitro studies implicated both ET(A) and ET(B) receptors, but there is no conclusive evidence in vivo. METHODS: We recruited 13 consenting hypertensive patients: six with primary aldosteronism (PA) and seven with high-to-normal renin hypertension (HNRH). They were infused with a low dose (200 nmol/min for 5 min followed by 100 nmol/min for 10 min) of the ET(A)-selective antagonist BQ-123 either alone or, on a different day, together with an identical dose of the ET(B)-selective antagonist BQ-788. Plasma aldosterone, cortisol and ACTH concentration and plasma renin activity (PRA) were measured with radioimmunoassay at -15, 0, 30, 60, 120, 240, 360 min, while BP was recorded non-invasively. RESULTS: BQ-123 alone and combined with BQ-788 significantly lowered mean BP in both PA and HNRH patients (by 6-10 mmHg at nadir; P<0.01). In PA patients, a short-lived decrease of aldosterone was elicited by combined BQ-123 and BQ-788 (-14%; P<0.05), but not by BQ-123 alone; cortisol, ACTH, and PRA were unaffected by either treatment. In HNRH patients, BQ-123 both alone and combined with BQ-788 lowered aldosterone (-39 and -28%, respectively) and PRA (-43 and -16%, respectively), while cortisol and ACTH were unaffected. CONCLUSIONS: Endogenous ET-1 contributes to maintaining the high BP values and the aldosterone secretion in both PA and HNRH patients. In the former patients, the aldosterone secretagogue effect of ET-1 is mediated via ET(B) receptors, while in the latter it occurs mainly via ET(A)-mediated stimulation of renin production.  (+info)

Myocardial ultrasonic backscatter in hypertension: relation to aldosterone and endothelin. (66/516)

A disproportionate accumulation of fibrillar collagen is a characteristic feature of hypertensive heart disease, but the extent of myocardial fibrosis may differ in different models of hypertension. In experimental studies, aldosterone and endothelins emerge as important determinants of myocardial fibrosis. Changes in myocardial extracellular matrix and collagen deposition can be estimated noninvasively by analysis of the ultrasonic backscatter signal, which arises from tissue heterogeneity within the myocardium and describes myocardial texture. This study was designed to investigate the relations between myocardial integrated backscatter and circulating aldosterone and immunoreactive endothelin in human hypertension. The study population consisted of 56 subjects: 14 healthy normotensive volunteers and 42 hypertensive patients (14 with primary aldosteronism, 7 with renovascular hypertension, and 21 with essential hypertension). The patients with essential and secondary hypertension were matched for age, gender, body mass index, and blood pressure. Myocardial integrated backscatter at diastole was 19.8+/-2.0 and 20.8+/-2.9 decibels in normotensive control subjects and patients with essential hypertension and significantly higher in patients with primary aldosteronism (27.4+/-3.8 decibels, P<0.01) and renovascular hypertension (26.8+/-4.8 decibels, P<0.01). In the population as a whole, as well as in the hypertensive subpopulation, myocardial integrated backscatter was directly related to plasma aldosterone (r=0.73 and 0.71, P<0.01 for both) and immunoreactive endothelin (r=0.60 and 0.56, P<0.01 for both). The data of this study suggest that in human hypertension, circulating aldosterone and immunoreactive endothelin may induce alterations in left ventricular myocardial texture, possibly related to increased myocardial collagen content.  (+info)

Conn's syndrome associated with Behcet's disease. (67/516)

A 39-yr-old woman, who had been treated for Behcet's disease for 4 yr, was admitted for further investigation of recently identified hypokalemia and hypertension. Suppressed plasma renin activity with elevated plasma aldosterone concentration and an anomalous postural decrease in plasma aldosterone were observed. An abdominal CT scan revealed a right adrenal mass. The patient was diagnosed with Conn's syndrome. The association of Conn's syndrome with Behcet's disease was thought to be coincidental. To our knowledge, this is the first case of Conn's syndrome associated with Behcet's disease.  (+info)

The sweet cake that reaches parts other cakes can't! (68/516)

This is a case report of a previously healthy woman of 56 years who presented with a life threatening tetraparesis, severe hypokalaemia, hypertension, and raised muscle enzymes. The cause of was finally found to be unusual and very much "local". Initial inquiry into her drug history was negative until she was made aware that herbal remedies could cause serious adverse reactions. She then mentioned that she had been eating a large number of "Pontefract cakes" (a liquorice sweet) for the management of her chronic constipation. This case highlights the importance of asking about herbal remedies when taking a drug history in all patients, including those admitted as medical emergencies.  (+info)

Is altered adrenal steroid biosynthesis a key intermediate phenotype in hypertension? (69/516)

Approximately 10% of patients with hypertension have a high ratio of aldosterone to renin, but the reason for this and the relationships among low-renin essential hypertension, elevation of the ratio, and true primary aldosteronism are unclear. We have previously reported that a polymorphism of the gene (C-to-T conversion at position -344) encoding aldosterone synthase is associated with hypertension, particularly in patients with a high ratio. However, the most consistent association with this variant is a relative impairment of adrenal 11beta-hydroxylation. In this review, we propose that altered conversion of deoxycortisol to cortisol leads to a subtle, chronic increase in adrenocortrophin drive to the adrenal cortex, with eventual development of hyperplasia. In combination with other genetic or environmental factors (such as dietary sodium intake), we suggest that this might be responsible for the long-term development of a resetting of the aldosterone response to angiotensin II, giving rise to the phenotype of hypertension with a raised ratio. In some subjects, this may progress further to true primary aldosteronism with a dominant adrenal nodule. Thus, there may be a genetically influenced continuum from hypertension with a normal ratio, through hypertension with a raised ratio, and primary aldosteronism.  (+info)

Establishment of reference values for endocrine tests. III: Primary aldosteronism. (70/516)

BACKGROUND: In our laboratory well-defined reference values for the screening test and confirmation test used in the diagnosis of primary aldosteronism were lacking. In this study we established the reference-values of the plasma aldosterone concentration (PA), plasma renin activity (PRA) and PA/PRA ratio after a two-hour upright period, and of the urinary aldosterone excretion after oral sodium loading. METHODS: Fifty healthy volunteers, equally distributed according to sex and aged between 20 and 70 years, went through the screening and confirmation test of primary aldosteronism. PA, PRA and the PA/PRA ratios were measured after a two-hour upright period (screening test). Urinary aldosterone excretion was determined in two 24-hour urine samples after an oral suppletion of 6 g NaCl a day for five days (confirmation test). RESULTS: The following reference values were established: PA (after two-hour upright position) <0.03-1.05 nmol/l (mean: 0.47), PA/PRA ratio 0.05-0.47 (mean: 0.15) and urinary aldosterone excretion after sodium loading <3.0-47.0 nmol/24h (mean: 10.5). PRA showed a significant decrease with advancing age: median values in the 3rd to 7th decade are 3.9, 3.5, 2.5, 1.6 and 2.1 ng A1/ml/h respectively (p=0.04). PA was lower in subjects > or = 50 years old. Age did not affect the PA/PRA ratio or the urinary aldosterone excretion. There were no significant differences between the sexes in any of the above-mentioned parameters. CONCLUSION: In this study we established reference values for the screening and confirmation test used in the diagnosis of primary aldosteronism.  (+info)

Primary aldosteronism and hypertensive disease. (71/516)

Recent studies in hypertensive populations that have used the serum aldosterone (SA) to plasma renin activity (PRA) ratio as a screening test have demonstrated a high prevalence of primary aldosteronism (PA). This frequency is higher than that previously described when hypokalemia was used as a screening tool. However, other factors, such as the characteristics of hypertensive disease, could also influence the prevalence of PA. We studied 609 essential hypertensive patients, classified according to the Joint National Committee VI (JNC VI), in 3 different stages depending on the severity of their hypertensive disease. We measured SA and PRA and calculated the SA-PRA ratio for all patients. An SA-PRA ratio >25 was detected in 63 of 609 patients, and the fludrocortisone test confirmed the PA diagnoses in 37 of 609 (6.1%) cases. PA prevalence according to hypertension stage was as follows: stage 1, 6 of 301 cases (1.99%); stage 2, 15 of 187 cases (8.02%); and stage 3, 16 of 121 cases (13.2%). PA patients were slightly younger than the other hypertensive patients (48.4+/-10.5 vs 53.6+/-10.2 years; P<0.05). Serum potassium levels were normal in 36 of 37 PA patients; only 1 patient had minor hypokalemia. Computed tomography scans showed bilateral adrenal enlargement in 7 and an adrenal nodule in 2 cases. In summary, we found a high frequency of PA in essential hypertensives classified in stages 2 and 3 according to the JNC VI. The low frequency of computed tomography scan abnormalities and hypokalemia suggests that the diagnosis for most PA patients corresponds to attenuated forms of the disease.  (+info)

Aldosteronism: an immunostimulatory state precedes proinflammatory/fibrogenic cardiac phenotype. (72/516)

Chronic inappropriate (relative to dietary Na+ intake) elevations in circulating aldosterone (ALDO), termed aldosteronism, are associated with remodeling of intramural arteries of the right and left heart. Lesions appear at week 4 of treatment with ALDO and 1% dietary NaCl in uninephrectomized rats (ALDOST) and include invading monocytes, macrophages and lymphocytes with intracellular evidence of oxidative and nitrosative stress, myofibroblasts, and perivascular fibrosis. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that an immunostimulatory state with activated circulating peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) precedes this proinflammatory and profibrogenic cardiac phenotype and is initiated by reduction in the cytosolic free Mg2+ concentration ([Mg2+]i). At 1 and 4 wk of ALDOST (preclinical and clinical stages, respectively), we monitored serum Mg2+, PBMC [Mg2+]i and cytosolic free [Ca2+] (via fluorimetry), and expressed genes (via microchip array) as well as markers of oxidative and nitrosative stress in plasma [alpha1-antiproteinase activity (alpha1-AP)] and cardiac tissue (immunohistochemical detection of gp91phox subunit of NADPH oxidase and 3-nitrotyrosine). Age- and gender-matched unoperated and untreated (UO) rats and uninephrectomized salt-treated (UN) rats served as controls. Serum [Mg2+] was unchanged by ALDOST. In contrast with UO and UN, [Mg2+]i and plasma alpha1-AP were each reduced (P < 0.05) at weeks 1 and 4. The decline in PBMC [Mg2+]i was accompanied by Ca2+ loading. Differential (twofold and higher) expression (up- and downregulation) in PBMC transcriptomes was present at week 1 and progressed at week 4. Involved were genes for the alpha1-isoform of Na+-K+-ATPase, the ATP-dependent Ca2+ pump, antioxidant reserves, inducible nitric oxide synthase, and PBMC activation with autoimmune responses. Expression of 3-nitrotyrosine and activation of gp91phox were seen in inflammatory cells that invaded intramural arteries. Thus early in aldosteronism (preclinical stage), an immunostimulatory state featuring activated circulating PBMCs with reduced ionized [Mg2+]i and oxidative and nitrosative stress precedes and may even predispose to coronary vascular lesions that first appear at week 4.  (+info)