Serial changes in blood pressure, renal function, endothelin and lipoprotein (a) during the first 9 days of cyclosporin therapy in males

Abstract
To elucidate the sequential mechanisms underlying cyclosporin-induced hypertension and nephrotoxicity. A study of healthy males over the first 9 days of drug ingestion to permit the detection of serial changes in renal function and blood pressure in a situation free from the confounding variables of concomitant disease or drugs. Double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized crossover study with cyclosporin (5 mg/kg twice a day) or placebo. Blood pressure and urinary sodium excretion were measured each day, and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) were measured on days 1, 4, 7 and 9. Cholesterol, lipoprotein (a) and endothelin were measured on days 1 and 9. GFR decreased by 9% with cyclosporin and was significantly lower than with placebo on day 4 of therapy. ERPF fell by 24%. The fall in GFR correlated significantly with suppressed plasma renin activity (PConclusions: Cyclosporin-induced hypertension and renal vasoconstriction are well established after 9 days of cyclosporin 5 mg/kg twice a day. We found no evidence to implicate either circulating endothelin or renal sodium retention in the onset of cyclosporin-induced hypertension. Cyclosporin-induced renal vasoconstriction appeared to occur when the protective mechanism of plasma renin activity suppression became exhausted.