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Association of Urinary Sodium Excretion with Vascular Damage: A Local Kidney Effect, Rather Than a Marker of Generalized Vascular Impairment.

Areti TriantafyllouPanagiota AnyfantiEugenia GkaliagkousiXenophon ZabulisAnastasios VamvakisVasileios GkoliasKonstantinos PetidisSpyros AslanidisStella Douma
Published in: International journal of hypertension (2018)
Evidence suggests that increased salt consumption induces blood pressure- (BP) mediated organ damage, yet it remains unclear whether it reflects a generalized micro- and macrovascular malfunction independent of BP. We studied 197 newly diagnosed and never-treated individuals with hypertension, intermediate hypertensive phenotypes, and normal BP, classified by use of 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring. Sodium excretion and microalbuminuria were estimated in 24-hour urine samples, dermal capillary density was estimated from capillaroscopy, and arterial stiffness was estimated with pulse wave velocity (PWV) and augmentation index (AIx). Sodium excretion correlated with microalbuminuria (p<0.001) and 24-hour and day- and nighttime systolic BP, but not with office blood pressure, arterial stiffness, or capillary density. In the multivariate analysis, the association with microalbuminuria was maintained (p=0.007). In a population free from the long-standing effects of hypertension, increased salt intake appears to be associated with early signs of vascular kidney damage, rather than a diffuse micro- and macrovascular impairment.
Keyphrases
  • blood pressure
  • hypertensive patients
  • newly diagnosed
  • heart rate
  • oxidative stress
  • blood glucose
  • low grade
  • type diabetes
  • metabolic syndrome
  • data analysis
  • soft tissue
  • atrial fibrillation