Normotension, hypertension and body fluid regulation: Brain and kidney
Published online on May 23, 2016
Abstract
The fraction of hypertensive patients with essential hypertension (EH) is decreasing as the knowledge of mechanisms of secondary hypertension increase, but in most new cases of hypertension the pathophysiology remains unknown. Separate neurocentric and renocentric concepts of etiology have prevailed without much interaction. In this regard, several questions regarding the relationships between body fluid and blood pressure regulation are pertinent. Are all forms of EH associated with sympathetic overdrive or a shift in the pressure natriuresis curve? Is body fluid homeostasis normally driven by the influence of arterial blood pressure directly on the kidney? Does plasma renin activity, driven by renal nerve activity and renal arterial pressure, provide a key to stratification of EH? Our review indicates that (i) a narrow definition of EH is useful, (ii) in EH, indices of cardiovascular sympathetic activity are elevated in about 50% of cases, (iii) in EH as in normal conditions, mediators other than arterial blood pressure are the major determinants of renal sodium excretion, (iv) chronic hypertension is always associated with a shift in the pressure natriuresis curve, but this may be an epiphenomenon, (v) plasma renin levels are useful in the analysis of EH only after metabolic standardization and then determination of the renin function line (plasma renin as a function of sodium intake), and (vi) angiotensin II mediated hypertension is not a model of EH. Recent studies of baroreceptors and renal nerves as well as sodium intake and renin secretion help bridge the gap between the neurocentric and renocentric concepts.
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