Endothelial Dysfunction in Salt-Sensitive Essential Hypertension

Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate endothelium-dependent and -independent vasodilation, as well as endothelium biochemical markers, in a group of essential hypertensive patients classified on the basis of salt sensitivity. Changes in forearm blood flow in response to acetylcholine, sodium nitroprusside, and N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) infusion were determined by means of strain-gauge plethysmography. Moreover, plasma and urinary concentrations of nitrates, cGMP, and endothelin were measured during low (50 mmol/d) and high (250 mmol/d) salt intake. Salt-sensitive hypertension was diagnosed in 26 patients who exhibited a significant increase in 24-hour mean blood pressure assessed by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring after 1 week of high salt intake. Nineteen patients were considered salt resistant. Compared with salt-resistant hypertensives, salt-sensitive patients presented a significant lower (P=0.005) maximal acetylcholine-induced vasodilation (21+/-6.3 versus 28+/-7.5 mL. 100 mL(-1). tissue. min(-1)). On the contrary, maximal sodium nitroprusside-induced vasodilation did not significantly differ between groups (22.4+/-4.5 versus 23.9+/-5.3 mL. 100 mL(-1). tissue. min(-1)). The decrease in maximal acetylcholine-induced vasodilation promoted by the coadministration of L-NMMA was significantly more pronounced in salt-resistant compared with salt-sensitive patients (P=0.003). Finally, high salt intake promoted a significant decrease in 24-hour urinary nitrate excretion in salt-sensitive patients (from 443+/-54 to 312+/-54 micromol/d; P=0.033) compared with salt-resistant hypertensives (from 341+/-50 to 378+/-54 micromol/d). We conclude that salt-sensitive hypertension is associated with endothelial dysfunction characterized by a defective endothelium-dependent vasodilation. Impairment of the L-arginine-nitric oxide pathway may be responsible for this abnormal endothelial response.