Clinical endocrinology
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Clinical endocrinology · Oct 2002
Influence of antihypertensive medication on aldosterone and renin concentration in the differential diagnosis of essential hypertension and primary aldosteronism.
Antihypertensive drugs influence the neurohumoral cardiovascular system and the concentration of hormones involved in blood pressure regulation. Little is known, however, about the extent to which various antihypertensive drugs influence cardiovascular hormone concentrations and thus disturb the differential diagnosis of hypertension in clinical practice. In this study we compare the impact of different antihypertensive medicaments on the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system in patients with essential hypertension who are screened for primary aldosteronism. ⋯ Beta-blockers and aldosterone antagonists have the strongest impact on the renin-angiotensin system. The decrease in renin concentration by beta-blockers leads to an increase in the ratio of aldosterone to renin, and thus to false-positive results in patients with essential hypertension. Calcium channel blockers, and probably also ACE inhibitors and AT1 receptor antagonists alone or in combination, may be continued during screening for primary aldosteronism by determination of renin and aldosterone concentration.