Author:
McCarron David A.,Hatton Daniel,Roullet Jean-Baptiste,Roullet Chantal
Abstract
The association between dietary calcium intake, calcium metabolism, and blood pressure form the basis of this review. Epidemiologic data consistently show an inverse relationship between dietary calcium and blood pressure. Clinical trials of calcium supplementation have not been as consistent in outcome. Approximately two-thirds of the supplementation studies have found a beneficial effect of calcium on blood pressure. The lack of consistency in outcome from the clinical trials relative to the epidemiological literature may be related to calcium intake. The epidemiological literature indicates an inverse relationship between calcium intake and blood pressure, with those individuals with the lowest calcium intake (< 700 mg/day) having the highest blood pressure. Clinical studies utilizing patients with high baseline calcium levels (> 700 mg/day) may not see an effect of calcium supplementation on blood pressure because of a ceiling effect. Supplemental calcium appears to correct a defect in calcium handling characterized by a renal calcium leak, increased circulating parathroid hormone, and increased intracellular calcium levels. In part, the deficit in cellular calcium homeostasis may be a consequence of abnormal calmodulin activity. Specifically, it appears that calmodulin activity is diminished in experimental hypertension and that increasing dietary calcium may improve calmodulin activity in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. The deficit in calmodulin activity has the potential to interfere with a number of cellular processes crucial to the regulation of cell function and maintenance of appropriate vascular tone. It is concluded that additional research should be directed toward understanding the ramifications of altered calmodulin activity in hypertension and the influence that dietary calcium can have on the activity of calmodulin.Key words: hypertension, dietary Ca2+, calmodulin, Ca2+ metabolism, calcium channel blockers.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
13 articles.
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