Acta physiologica Scandinavica
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Acta Physiol. Scand. · May 1999
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialIsotonic and hypertonic sodium loading in supine humans.
The hypothesis that hypertonic saline infusion induces a greater natriuresis than infusion of the same amount of sodium as isotonic saline was tested in 8 supine subjects on fixed sodium intake of 150 mmol NaCl day(-1). Sodium loads equivalent to the amount of sodium contained in 10% of measured extracellular volume were administered intravenously over 90 min either as isotonic saline or as hypertonic saline (850 mmol L(-1)). A third series without saline infusion served as time control. ⋯ In conclusion, hypertonic saline did not produce excess natriuresis. However, as the two loading procedures induced similar natriureses during different volumetric stimuli, part of the natriuresis elicited by hypertonic saline could be mediated by stimulation of osmoreceptors involved in renal sodium excretion. The supine position does not provide stable time control conditions with regard to renal excretory function.