Normotensive Salt Sensitivity
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 33 (1) , 18-23
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.33.1.18
Abstract
-Normotensive salt sensitivity, a putative precursor of hypertension, might be quite frequent in African Americans (blacks) and less frequent in Caucasian Americans (whites), but only when dietary potassium is deficient and not when maintained well within the normal range. We tested this hypothesis in 41 metabolically controlled studies of 38 healthy normotensive men (24 blacks, 14 whites) who ate a basal diet low in sodium (15 mmol/d) and marginally deficient in potassium (30 mmol/d) for 6 weeks. Throughout the last 4 weeks, NaCl was loaded (250 mmol/d); throughout the last 3, potassium was supplemented (as potassium bicarbonate) to either mid- or high-normal levels, 70 and 120 mmol/d. Salt sensitivity, defined as an increase in mean arterial blood pressure >/=3 mm Hg with salt loading, was deemed "moderate" if increasing </=10 mm Hg and "severe" if increasing more. When dietary potassium was 30 mmol/d, salt loading induced a mean increase in blood pressure only in blacks (P<0.001), and salt sensitivity occurred in most blacks but not whites (79% vs 36% (P<0.02). Supplementing potassium only to 70 mmol/d attenuated moderate salt sensitivity similarly in blacks and whites; 120 mmol/d abolished it, attenuated severe salt sensitivity, which occurred in a quarter of affected blacks, and suppressed the frequency and severity of salt sensitivity in blacks to levels similar to those observed in whites. These observations demonstrate that in most normotensive black men but not white men, salt sensitivity occurs when dietary potassium is even marginally deficient but is dose-dependently suppressed when dietary potassium is increased within its normal range. Such suppression might prevent or delay the occurrence of hypertension, particularly in the many blacks, in whom dietary potassium is deficient.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cardiovascular reactivity to stress predicts future blood pressure status.Hypertension, 1993
- Sodium and volume sensitivity of blood pressure. Age and pressure change over time.Hypertension, 1991
- Salt sensitivity. Definition, conception, methodology, and long-term issues.Hypertension, 1991
- Interaction of sodium sensitivity and stress in young adults.Hypertension, 1991
- Reliability of salt-sensitivity testing in normotensive subjectsJournal of Molecular Medicine, 1989
- Salt sensitivity in blacks. Salt intake and natriuretic substances.Hypertension, 1988
- Exacerbation of hypertension by high chloride, moderate sodium diet in the salt-sensitive spontaneously hypertensive rat.Hypertension, 1987
- Blood pressure in blacks and whites and its relationship to dietary sodium and potassium intakeJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1984
- The blood pressure-raising effects of high dietary sodium intake: racial differences and the role of potassium.Journal of the American College of Nutrition, 1982
- Cardiovascular characteristics in adolescents who develop essential hypertension.Hypertension, 1981