Transepithelial Sodium Absorption Is Increased in People of African Origin

Author:

Baker Emma H.1,Ireson Nicola J.1,Carney Christine1,Markandu Nirmala D.1,MacGregor Graham A.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Physiological Medicine, St George’s Hospital Medical School, Cranmer Terrace, London, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Salt-sensitive hypertension is more common and has more severe consequences in urban black populations than in white populations. Increased renal sodium reabsorption through epithelial sodium channels may underlie the development of high blood pressure in black people. Increased sodium channel activity has been detected in subjects with Liddle’s syndrome by nasal potential difference measurements. Nasal potential difference measurements were made in 39 black normotensive, 106 black hypertensive, 51 white normotensive, and 61 white hypertensive subjects. Blood pressure, body mass index, and 24-hour urinary sodium excretion were also measured. Maximum potential difference was significantly higher in black subjects than in white subjects ( P =0.009) but was not significantly different between normotensive and hypertensive subjects after adjustment for age, gender, current smoking status, body mass index, and 24-hour urinary sodium excretion (black normotensive, −21.6±1.0 mV; black hypertensive, −21.5±0.7 mV; white normotensive, −18.5±1.0 mV; and white hypertensive subjects, −18.9±0.9 mV). Nasal potential difference did not correlate with blood pressure or biochemical variables within ethnic and blood pressure groups. Nasal potential difference, an index of nasal sodium channel activity, is greater in black than in white people but does not differ between normotensive and hypertensive groups. Increased nasal potential difference measurements may reflect generalized upregulation of sodium transport in black people compared with white people, which may help to explain the high prevalence of hypertension in black people but would not explain differences in blood pressure within separate ethnic groups.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

Reference27 articles.

1. Prevalence, detection, and management of cardiovascular risk factors in different ethnic groups in south London

2. Poulter N Cappuccio F Chaturvedi N Cruickshank K. High Blood Pressure and the African-Caribbean Community in the UK. 1st ed. Birmingham England: MediNews Ltd; 1997.

3. Definitions and characteristics of sodium sensitivity and blood pressure resistance.

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