Increased sodium-lithium countertransport in college students with elevated blood pressure
- 25 February 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 249 (8) , 1030-1034
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.249.8.1030
Abstract
Blood pressure screening was carried out on a university campus to identify early hypertension or high-normal BP in young adults. Compared with normotensive control subjects of a similar age, drawn from the same population, persons identified as being at the upper end of the BP distribution had significantly increased levels of sodium-lithium counter-transport. This difference persisted when other potential confounding variables, eg, overweight, sex, ethnicity, sodium excretion, and age, were taken into account. A positive family history was associated with slightly higher levels of sodium-lithium countertransport, although the effect could be explained by higher present levels of BP. These data suggest that abnormalities of cation transport are present early in the course of the development of hypertension. Measurement of transport levels may provide an estimate of risk of hypertension and allow identification of susceptible persons. (JAMA1983;249:1030-1034)This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- A New Method for Investigating the Relation between Change and Initial Value in Longitudinal Blood Pressure Data: I. Description and Application of the MethodScandinavian Journal of Social Medicine, 1978
- CHRONIC DISEASE IN FORMER COLLEGE STUDENTS. VIII. CHARACTERISTICS IN YOUTH PREDISPOSING TO HYPERTENSION IN LATER YEARS1American Journal of Epidemiology, 1968