Journal of hypertension
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Journal of hypertension · Nov 1991
The assessment of the relationship between blood pressure and sodium intake using whole-day, daytime and overnight urine collections.
The usefulness of whole-day, daytime (waking to retiring time) and overnight urine samples for assessing the relationship between blood pressure and sodium intake was examined in 301 male London civil servants, aged from 37 to 58 years old. Systolic blood pressure (SBP)/diastolic blood pressure (DBP) averaged 126/78 mmHg and the 24-h urinary excretion of sodium and potassium was 174 and 73 mmol, respectively. There was poor consistency between day- and night-time urine samples with respect to both sodium and potassium content. ⋯ Blood pressure, adjusted for age and body mass index, was significantly and positively correlated with overnight sodium excretion (SBP/DBP: slope = 0.061/0.046 mmHg/mmol) whereas the correlations with sodium excretion in daytime (0.010/0.004 mmHg/mmol) and whole-day (0.024/0.016 mmHg/mmol) urine samples were not significant. Blood pressure was significantly correlated with the sodium:potassium ratio in whole-day urine (1.941/1.968 mmHg/unit). As the agreement between daytime and overnight urine samples was low with respect to both sodium and potassium content, and due to the fact that the relationship between blood pressure and sodium in overnight samples may at least partially reflect pressure diuresis, overnight urinary sodium, even if related to sodium intake, cannot be employed to assess the association between salt in the diet and blood pressure.
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Journal of hypertension · May 1991
Does a digoxin-like substance participate in vascular and pressure control during dietary sodium changes in patients with primary aldosteronism?
To evaluate the importance of an endogenous sodium pump inhibitor in the pathogenesis of low renin human hypertension, the urinary excretion of a digoxin-like immunoreactive substance (DLIS) was measured in eight patients with primary aldosteronism (n = 5, with adenomas) during two sequential 1-week periods of low- (20 mmol/l NaCl) and high- (200 mmol/l NaCl) sodium intake. DLIS excretion increased consistently during high-sodium intake while urinary aldosterone, plasma renin activity, cortisol and adrenocorticotropic hormone did not change. Although blood pressure showed a time-course parallel to that of the urinary DLIS, the blood pressure increments were not accompanied by evidence of vasoconstriction since forearm blood flow (plethysmographic technique) increased and forearm vascular resistances were reduced. ⋯ These results provide unequivocal evidence for a modulation by salt intake of the urinary excretion of a DLIS in patients with primary aldosteronism. This substance might participate in the regulation of body fluid volume in this syndrome and possibly in other physiological conditions. However, no evidence could be found for a cause--effect relationship between blood pressure and DLIS increments during high-salt intake, at least during the short-term course of the study.
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Journal of hypertension · Jul 1990
The British Hypertension Society protocol for the evaluation of automated and semi-automated blood pressure measuring devices with special reference to ambulatory systems.
With the increasing manufacture of expensive systems for the measurement of ambulatory blood pressure there is a need for potential purchasers to be able to satisfy themselves that the systems have been evaluated according to agreed criteria. The British Hypertension Society has, therefore, drawn up a protocol of requirements for the evaluation of these devices. This protocol incorporates many features of the American National Standard for Non-Automated Sphygmomanometers but includes many additional features, such as strict criteria for observer training, interdevice variability testing before and after a month of ambulatory use, and a new system of analysis which permits the test system to be graded. It is recommended that manufacturers of ambulatory blood pressure measuring devices should obtain an unbiased evaluation according to a recognized standard before a device is marketed.
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Journal of hypertension · Aug 1989
Review Comparative StudyOptimal size of cuff bladder for indirect measurement of arterial pressure in adults.
This study tested the hypothesis that a sphygmomanometer cuff bladder long enough to encircle the arm in most adults ('obese cuff') would provide a more accurate and precise estimate of intra-arterial pressure than the usual 'standard' cuff bladder. In 53 patients undergoing diagnostic coronary angiography (35 males, 18 females, aged 36-79 years), indirect blood pressure, measured in the left arm with a random-zero sphygmomanometer, was compared with simultaneously measured femoral intra-arterial pressure. Duplicate indirect measurements were made with each of two cuffs containing bladders measuring 39 x 15 cm ('obese') and 23 x 12 cm ('standard'). ⋯ Both cuffs underestimated systolic blood pressure, the obese cuff by 15.5 +/- 11.7 mmHg and the standard cuff by 7.6 +/- 12.1 mmHg. These systolic blood pressure underestimates were greater at higher blood pressures (P less than 0.01) and with smaller arms (P less than 0.05). Age was not related to measurement error with either cuff.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)