Abstract
Animal studies suggest that nitric oxide (NO) deficiency is linked to salt-sensitive hypertension and that NO activity decreases during normal aging. This study investigates the impact of increasing age and manipulations in dietary salt intake on biochemical indices of the NO system in healthy humans. We measured NO2 + NO3 (NOx; stable oxidation products of NO) and cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP; major second messenger) in plasma and urine of 30 healthy subjects aged 22 to 77 years. Subjects were maintained on controlled low NOx and low-, normal-, or high-salt diets for 3 days. Salt sensitivity of blood pressure was seen only in the oldest subjects. Plasma renin activity was suppressed by a high salt intake in all age groups, and baseline values declined with advancing age. Neither age nor salt intake correlated with indices of NO activity over the third 24-hour period of controlled salt intake. In a subgroup of subjects aged 33 ± 4 years challenged with ultrahigh sodium intake (400 mEq/24 h), again there was no increase in NO2 + N0 3 or cGMP measures. In contrast to animal studies, there is no correlation in humans between either salt intake or age and total NO production and activity, indicated by NO2 + N03 and cGMP measures. This does not preclude undetected alterations occurring in NO production and/or activity in strategic locations in the kidney and cardiovascular system. Limitations of blood and urine measurements of NO2 + N03 and cGMP as indices of NO activity are discussed.
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