Abstract
The effect of an intravenous infusion of saralasin in a rising dosage on blood pressure, central haemodynamics, forearm blood flow and venous distensibility was tested in 11 subjects with chronic non-uraemic renal disease. Only 1 subject had an elevated resting plasma renin activity, and in him saralasin produced a drop in systolic and diastolic blood pressures due to a decrease of the total peripheral vascular resistance whereas the plasma renin activity markedly rose. Among the remaining 10 subjects, whose plasma renin activity was within the normotensive range, blood pressure rose transiently in 3, with the lowest dose of aralasin, due to an increase in the total peripheral vascular resistance. Both these parameters returned to the control level when continuing the infusion and increasing its dosage. Excluding this initial period from the analysis, no relevant change, even with a more than tenfold increase in the saralasin dosage and a duration of the infusion of 1 h, was found in the following: blood pressure, cardiac and stroke index, heart rate, total peripheral vascular resistance, central and peripheral venous pressures, forearm blood flow and vascular resistance, forearm blood volume and venous distensibility. The haemodynamic response to the Valsalva manoeuvre remained unaffected by saralasin. It is concluded that angiotensin plays an active role in changing the haemodynamics and in elevating the blood pressure in subjects with chronic non-uraemic renal disease only in those cases where plasma renin activity is raised.
Published Version
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