Abstract

The blood pressure-raising effect of sodium chloride in salt-sensitive individuals depends on the administration of both sodium and chloride. While sodium chloride is well known to suppress the activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone and the sympathetic nervous system, the effects of nonchloride sodium salts on the response of these systems to physiological stimuli have not been previously studied. We therefore examined the effect of dietary intake of sodium chloride or sodium citrate on the activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone and the sympathetic nervous system during rest and following stimulation by active orthostasis in normotensive salt-sensitive (n = 7) and salt-resistant (n = 8) subjects. The subjects were given a low-salt diet (20 mmol/day) for 3 weeks, to which a supplement of 200 mmol sodium per day, provided as either sodium chloride or sodium citrate, or a placebo, was added for 1 week each. We found that sodium chloride raised blood pressure in the salt-sensitive subjects (P < .005), while sodium citrate did not. Both salts, however, led to a similar suppression of the plasma levels of renin activity, angiotensin II, aldosterone, and norepinephrine (P < .01). Both sodium salts attenuated the renin response to orthostasis in salt-sensitive and salt-resistant individuals (P < .01), but the orthostasis-induced rise in renin activity was significantly smaller in the salt-sensitive than in the salt-resistant group under both sodium salts (P < .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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