Abstract

Angiotensin II (Ile5) was infused for 72 h into 4 sodium replete (3 ng/kg/min) and 8 sodium deplete (3 or 6 ng/kg/min) healthy young men after appropriate control periods, and the effects on aldosterone secretion, plasma cortisol, ACTH, renin activity, plasma and urinary electrolytes, and blood pressure were assessed. Sustained contrived elevation of plasma angiotensin II levels in sodium replete subjects to the range of moderate sodium depletion led to a sustained increase in plasma and urinary aldosterone levels, which further and significantly increased between the 1st and 2nd days of angiotensin II infusion, when gross sodium retention during infusion was prevented. This additional increase may be explained as the expression of a "trophic" effect of angiotension II on the zona glomerulosa. In the sodium deplete state, the absolute increment of aldosterone secretion for a given elevation of angiotensin II levels diring infusion was larger than in sodium replete subjects. This confirms the conclusions from previous short-term angiotensin II infusion experiments that sodium deficiency sensitizes the zona glomerulosa against angiotensin II. The "trophic" effect of angiotensin II on the adrenal gland seems to be one mechanism by which the sensitization is brought about, but insufficient for its full explanation. Since plasma ACTH and cortisol, plasma sodium and potassium concentrations, and potassium blance did not change significantly across sodium depletion or angiotensin II infusion, the mechanism of sensitization awaits its full elucidation. The effect of angiotensin II on blood pressure was blunted by soidum depletion. The opposite shifts in sensitivity against angiotensin II of the zona glomerulosa and of resistance blood vessels with changes in the sodium state seem to be an effective and important means in the regulation of body sodium.

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