Abstract

The interrelationships among age, cardiovascular pressor reactivity to intravenously infused norepinephrine (NE) or angiotensin II, and endogenous plasma NE or renin (PRA) levels were evaluated i 31 normal subjects and 37 patients with essential hypertension. In normal subjects both angiotensin II pressor dose and PRA decreased progressively with aging. Angiotensin pressor dose correlated positively with PRA (r = 0.41, P < 0.025) and inversely with age (r = -0.46, P < 0.02). NE pressor dose and basal plasma NE were also positively correlated (r = 0.53, P < 0.005), but the two factors remained largely unchanged with aging. Findings in essential hypertension differed in certain aspects. Angiotensin II pressor dose did not correlate with either basal PRA or age; and pressor doses of NE and angiotensin II tended to be lower in some patients than in normal subjects. These findings indicate that aging is accompanied by a physiologic increase in cardiovascular reactivity to angiotensin II, probably due to a concomitant decrease in circulating renin. The dissociation between angiotensin pressor dose and PRA in essential hypertension suggests an interference from an other factor.

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