Racial differences in erythrocyte cation transport.
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- abstracts
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 6 (1) , 115-123
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.6.1.115
Abstract
Erythrocyte contents and ouabain-insensitive transport pathways were measured in 120 white and black normotensives and hypertensives. Mean maximal sodium-stimulated lithium-sodium countertransport rate was higher in white hypertensives than in white normotensives, and countertransport was significantly positively correlated with mean arterial pressure in whites. Values similar to those in white normotensives were found in both black normotensives and hypertensives, and countertransport was not significantly correlated with blood pressure in blacks. The rate constant for passive lithium efflux was greater in whites as compared to blacks, and the difference was not related to blood pressure level or sex. Ouabain-insensitive, furosemide-sensitive sodium and potassium effluxes were not found to be altered in hypertension. Furosemide-sensitive sodium efflux rate was lower in blacks but furosemide-sensitive potassium efflux was not similarly depressed. While white subjects demonstrated a close correlation between sodium and potassium effluxes, blacks did not. Further study of these differences in the cellular metabolism of sodium and potassium may provide clues to the pathogenesis of racial dissimilarities in total body sodium handling.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Red cell lithium-sodium countertransport and sodium-potassium cotransport in patients with essential hypertension.Hypertension, 1982
- Essential hypertension: sodium-lithium countertransport in erythrocytes from patients and from children having one hypertensive parent.Hypertension, 1982
- Red-Cell Sodium-Lithium Countertransport and Essential HypertensionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- Sodium-lithium exchange and sodium-potassium cotransport in human erythrocytes. Part 2: A simple uptake test applied to normotensive and essential hypertensive individuals.Hypertension, 1982
- Sodium-lithium exchange and sodium-potassium cotransport in human erythrocytes. Part 1: Evaluation of a simple uptake test to assess the activity of the two transport systems.Hypertension, 1982
- Increased Red-Cell Sodium-Lithium Countertransport in Normotensive Sons of Hypertensive ParentsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- Lithium, membranes, and manic-depressive illnessThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1980
- Increased Sodium-Lithium Countertransport in Red Cells of Patients with Essential HypertensionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Laboratory Distinction between Essential and Secondary Hypertension by Measurement of Erythrocyte Cation FluxesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980
- Inherited defect in a Na+, K+ -co-transport system in erythrocytes from essential hypertensive patientsNature, 1980