Maximal Discrimination of Renovascular from Essential Hypertension by the Saralasin Test

1978 ◽  
Vol 55 (s4) ◽  
pp. 297s-299s ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. Maxwell ◽  
P. Varady ◽  
E. T. Zawada ◽  
J.-F. Burkhalter ◽  
U. Waks ◽  
...  

1. Thirty-four patients with essential hypertension and 37 with proven renovascular hypertension were tested with saralasin after frusemide-induced diuresis. 2. Variables used for analysis were: pre-saralasin plasma renin activity (PRA), post-saralasin PRA, and ratios of systolic and diastolic blood pressures (saralasin blood pressure/control blood pressure). 3. Stepwise linear discriminant analysis demonstrated that the most significant variables were diastolic ratio, systolic ratio, and post-saralasin PRA. 4. Minimal misclassification (14·1%) was achieved by combining diastolic ratio, baseline supine PRA and post-saralasin PRA; but using post-saralasin PRA alone resulted in misclassification of only 15·5% (7 essential hypertension and 4 renovascular hypertension). 5. Thus, PRA increased disproportionately after saralasin in renin-dependent renovascular hypertension because of the fall in blood pressure and/or interruption of the short, negative angiotensin II feedback loop. 6. It is concluded that the rise in PRA after the combined stimuli of volume depletion and saralasin is more sensitive than the fall in blood pressure in discriminating between essential hypertension and renovascular hypertension, although minimal misclassification is achieved by analysing baseline PRA, diastolic ratio and post-saralasin PRA simultaneously.

1970 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 559-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Bianchi ◽  
L. Campolo ◽  
A. Vegeto ◽  
V. Pietra ◽  
U. Piazza

1. Plasma renin concentration (PRC) has been measured in 212 hypertensive patients. In fourteen patients with essential hypertension and in seventeen patients with renovascular hypertension, plasma volume (PV) and extracellular fluid volume (ECFV) were measured. 2. The results obtained have been discussed in three ways: (a) PRC in relation to the aetiology of hypertension; (b) PRC in relation to the effect on blood pressure of surgery for unilateral renal diseases; (c) PRC, PV and ECFV in ‘essential’ and renovascular hypertension. 3. Excluding patients with ophthalmoscopic signs of malignant hypertension, PRC is significantly higher in renovascular hypertension than in normal subjects and patients suffering from ‘essential’ hypertension and hypertension associated with bilateral renal disease; but the overlapping of the single values of the patients with these diseases is marked. Thus a normal PRC has no diagnostic value, while a high PRC without sodium deficiency or retinopathy might favour a diagnosis of renovascular disease. 4. In twenty-seven out of thirty-three patients submitted to surgery for unilateral renal disease and followed up for 12 months or longer, blood pressure has been significantly reduced. This group includes twelve patients with a normal preoperative PRC and fifteen patients with a high PRC. These results clearly demonstrate that unilateral renal disease may maintain a high blood pressure without increasing PRC and that PRC has no prognostic value. 5. Concurrent estimations of PRC, PV and ECFV in patients with renovascular or essential hypertension revealed the following differences. In cases of renovascular hypertension with normal PRC, PV and ECFV were significantly increased while in those with raised PRC, PV did not differ and ECFV was barely raised with respect to values obtained in patients with essential hypertension. PV of renovascular patients with normal renin was significantly higher than that of renovascular patients with high renin. The analysis of these results with quadratic discriminant functions demonstrated that an integrated evaluation of blood pressure, PV, ECFV and PRC allows a separation between the two types of hypertension. In other words these factors, taken together, in some way seem to reflect a difference between the two diseases. These results may indicate a new type of approach to the diagnosis and prognosis of renovascular hypertension.


2002 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 543-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Amerena ◽  
S Pappas ◽  
J-P Ouellet ◽  
L Williams ◽  
D O'Shaughnessy

In this multicentre, prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint (PROBE) study, the efficacy of 12 weeks' treatment with once-daily telmisartan 40–80 mg and enalapril 10–20 mg was evaluated using ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) in 522 patients with mild-to-moderate essential hypertension. Patients were titrated to the higher dose of study drug at week 6 if mean seated diastolic blood pressure (DBP) was ≥ 90 mmHg. The primary endpoint was the change from baseline in ambulatory DBP in the last 6 h of the 24-h dosing interval after 12 weeks' treatment. Telmisartan and enalapril produced similar reductions from baseline in DBP and systolic blood pressure (SBP) over all ABPM periods evaluated (last 6 h, 24-h, daytime and night-time). Telmisartan produced a significantly greater reduction in mean seated trough DBP, measured unblinded with an automated ABPM device in the clinic, amounting to a difference of −2.02 mmHg ( P < 0.01). A significantly greater proportion of patients achieved a seated diastolic response with telmisartan than enalapril (59% versus 50%; P < 0.05), also measured with the same ABPM device. Both treatments were well tolerated. Compared with telmisartan, enalapril was associated with a higher incidence of cough (8.9% versus 0.8%) and hypotension (3.9% versus 1.1%). Therefore, telmisartan may provide better long-term compliance and, consequently, better blood pressure control than enalapril.


1984 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 659-663 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. T. Bannan ◽  
J. F. Potter ◽  
D. G. Beevers ◽  
J. B. Saunders ◽  
J. R. F. Walters ◽  
...  

1. Sixty-five alcoholic patients admitted for detoxification had blood pressure, withdrawal symptoms, plasma cortisol (PC) and plasma aldosteron (PA) levels, plasma renin activity (PRA), and serum dopamin β-hydroxylase (DBH) levels measured on the first and fourth days after admission. 2. On the morning after admission blood pressure was elevated (>140/90) in 32 patients (49%) and was 160/95mmHg or more in 21 (32%). PRA was initially elevated in 41 patients, PA levels in 14, and 13 patients had raised PC levels. By the fourth day, blood pressure and bio-chemical measures had fallen significantly while urine volume and sodium output, low on admission, had increased significantly. On admission urinary metanephrine levels were raised in four out of the 31 patients who had them measured. 3. The height of both the systolic and diastolic blood pressures was significantly related to the severity of the alcohol. withdrawal symptoms. Of the biochemical parameters measured, PC level correlated with systolic but not diastolic pressure, and urinary volume was inversely correlated with the height of the diastolic pressure. No relationship was found between blood pressure and PRA or PA level. 4. The pressor effect of alcohol withdrawal could be due to sympathetic nervous system overactivity, or possibly to hypercortisolaemia. The first hypothesis seems more likely.


1976 ◽  
Vol 51 (s3) ◽  
pp. 177s-180s ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Gordon ◽  
Freda Doran ◽  
M. Thomas ◽  
Frances Thomas ◽  
P. Cheras

1. As experimental models of reduced nephron population in man, (a) twelve men aged 15–32 years who had one kidney removed 1–13 years previously and (b) fourteen normotensive men aged 70–90 years were studied. Results were compared with those in eighteen normotensive men aged 18–28 years and eleven men aged 19–33 years with essential hypertension. 2. While the subjects followed a routine of normal diet and daily activity, measurements were made, after overnight recumbency and in the fasting state, of plasma volume and renin activity on one occasion in hospital and of blood pressure on five to fourteen occasions in the home. Blood pressure was also measured after standing for 2 min and plasma renin activity after 1 h standing, sitting or walking. Twenty-four hour urinary aldosterone excretion was also measured. 3. The measurements were repeated in the normotensive subjects and subjects in (a) and (b) above after 10 days of sodium-restricted diet (40 mmol of sodium/day). 4. The mean plasma renin activity (recumbent) in essential hypertensive subjects was higher than in normotensive subjects. In subjects of (a) and (b) above, it was lower than normotensive subjects, and was not increased by dietary sodium restriction in subjects of (a). 5. The mean aldosterone excretion level was lower in old normotensive subjects than in the other groups, and increased in each group after dietary sodium restriction. 6. Mean plasma volume/surface area was not different between the four groups and in normotensive, essential hypertensive and nephrectomized subjects but not subjects aged 70–90 years was negatively correlated with standing diastolic blood pressure.


1982 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 145
Author(s):  
Soon Kyu Suh ◽  
Sae Wha Yoo ◽  
Soon Chang Park ◽  
Joon Sock Kim ◽  
Kyung Ho Kang ◽  
...  

Hypertension ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 76 (Suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nirav H Shah

Introduction: We assessed the efficacy of mobile healthhypertension monitoring for patients enrolled inMedicare’s Remote Physiologic Monitoring (RPM)program. Hypothesis: Uncontrolled hypertension is an increasingepidemic associated with cardiovascular disease.Despite many available treatments, the averagetime to blood pressure control is slow. Lack ofaccess to patient information including bloodpressure data outside of the clinic setting meansthat clinicians cannot easily titrate medications. Wehypothesized that mobile health monitoring andcommunication with clinicians in a Medicare cohortwould decrease the hypertension burden andmitigate crisis blood pressure in patients. Methods: 1,544 patients who had contributed ≥ 20 bloodpressure readings in a remote monitoring programwere included in the study population, spanningclinics in Florida, Tennessee, Arizona, Ohio, Texas,New York, and California. Eligible patients carried adiagnosis of hypertension and had been seen bytheir doctor within the year they were referred. Themobile health platform was utilized to aggregateblood pressure data, which was analyzed by aremote care team and provided to clinicians on amonthly basis. Patients’ doctors and their teamsreviewed and managed the patients based on thedata provided by the mobile-cloud platform. Theremote monitoring program provided alerts to clinicstaff for patients who had blood pressures greaterthan 180mm Hg systolic (crisis hypertension) forexpedited decision making. Results: 1,544 patients who provided >20 BP readingsfrom January 2018 to January 2020 wereincluded in the study. A total of 297,731 bloodpressure readings were included in thisanalysis. Patient readings were stratified byepoch chronologically. The first epoch (E1),represented the first 25% of readings in theremote monitoring system, and the fourth epoch(E4) represented the final 25% of readings.From E1 to E4, patients saw an averagedecrease of 3.8 mmHg in systolic bloodpressure (132.9 vs. 129.1; p<0.001). Theproportion of readings in crisis hypertensionrange decreased from 2.3% to 1.1%; p=0.03). Conclusions: RPM offers a scalable solution to resistant hypertension.


1983 ◽  
Vol 245 (5) ◽  
pp. H734-H740
Author(s):  
G. I. Russell ◽  
R. F. Bing ◽  
J. D. Swales ◽  
H. Thurston

The hemodynamic changes associated with reversal of Goldblatt two-kidney, one-clip hypertension in conscious rats were studied using radioactive microspheres. In both the early phase (less than 6 wk from clipping) when plasma renin was elevated and the chronic phase (greater than 4 mo) when plasma renin was normal, hypertension was maintained by elevated peripheral resistance. Unclipping or removal of the ischemic kidney normalized blood pressure within 24 h by reduction in peripheral resistance. In early-phase hypertension blood pressure remained normal at 60 days after nephrectomy or unclipping, but in chronic-phase hypertension blood pressure was significantly elevated at 60 days after nephrectomy despite a similar fall in peripheral resistance. Plasma renin fell to normal or subnormal values after reversal in both early and chronic hypertension. Thus reversal of hypertension is associated with a rapid reduction in peripheral resistance even in longstanding hypertension. Since removal of the ischemic kidney and unclipping were equally effective, reversal must depend on either inhibition of a pressor system derived from the ischemic kidney or activation of a peripheral vasodepressor system not dependent on a revascularized kidney.


1985 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergio De Marchi ◽  
Emanuela Cecchin

We are very interested to read the paper by Bannan et al. [1] about the effect of alcohol withdrawal on blood pressure, plasma renin activity, aldosterone, cortisol and dopamine β-hydroxylase. It has been known for several years that alcoholic patients admitted to hospital for detoxification have a high prevalence of hypertension [2]. Their blood pressures return to normal after alcohol withdrawal symptoms have abated and they remain normal if they continue to abstain. Patients who resume drinking sustain a rise in blood pressure to their former high levels.


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