Abstract

Plasma immunoreactive atrial natriuretic factor 99-126 (ir ANF), plasma volume, plasma renin activity, and plasma aldosterone were measured during pregnancy in 14 normotensive nonpregnant women, 15 normotensive pregnant women, 35 patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH), and in ten patients with preeclampsia (PE). Repeated measurements were carried out 2 months after delivery in a subgroup of the same patients. The plasma levels of ANF were found to be higher in pregnant normotensive women than in nonpregnant normotensive women, but the decrease of plasma ANF 2 months after delivery was not significant on the basis of seven paired data, so that it cannot presently be stated with certainty that pregnancy per se stimulates ANF secretion. Still higher levels of ANF were found in PIH and, especially, in PE. A positive correlation was found in the pooled population of normotensive and hypertensive pregnant women between plasma ANF and mean arterial pressure. A greater decrease of plasma ANF was found after delivery in the hypertensive patients than in the normotensive controls. This excludes an absolute deficiency of ANF secretion in the pathogenesis of hypertension. These findings suggest a compensatory role of ANF in the prevention of blood pressure increase. Plasma renin activity (PRA) and plasma aldosterone concentrations were higher in normotensive pregnant women than in normotensive nonpregnant women. Compared to normal pregnancy, plasma volume was decreased in PIH (-17%) and in PE (-25%), whereas PRA was less increased in both groups and plasma aldosterone concentration was less increased only in the PE group. The simultaneous high levels of plasma ANF may explain this inappropriate hypostimulation of renin secretion by hypovolemia in these hypertensive states.

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