Abstract

The mechanisms underlying the reduction in blood pressure that occurs with a severe energy-restricted diet were evaluated in 12 obese subjects during 8 days on a very—low-calorie diet (1.67 MJ/d) with a constant intake of 17 mmol sodium per day. The relationship between changes in blood pressure, sodium balance, plasma volume, renin-aldosterone and sympathetic nervous system activities, plasma C-terminus and N-terminus of the atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) prohormone, brain natriuretic peptide (BNP), and endothelin-1 (ET-1) concentrations was investigated. A negative sodium balance was present throughout the diet and was associated with a moderate reduction in plasma volume, a marked activation of the renin-aldosterone system, and a concomitant reduction in C- and N-terminal ANF prohormone levels. Moreover, the postural changes in N-terminal proANF and ANF secretion documented before the diet, disappeared after 8 days of dieting, in contrast to a greater postural stimulation of aldosterone and renin. A negative correlation was found between the changes of C- and N-terminal ANF prohormone levels and those of aldosterone. Urinary catecholamine excretion, BNP, and ET-1 remained unchanged. These results indicate that the decrease in blood pressure occurring during severe caloric restriction was essentially due to the reduction in the effective blood volume, as reflected by the stimulation of the renin-aldosterone system and the decrease in ANF levels. The lack of any changes in catecholamine excretion and endothelin levels suggests that peripheral vascular resistance did not change significantly in these circumstances.

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