Salt-Sensitive Hypertension and the Kidney

Author:

Nishimoto Mitsuhiro1ORCID,Griffin Karen A.23ORCID,Wynne Brandi M.4ORCID,Fujita Toshiro5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Nephrology & Hypertension, International University of Health and Welfare Mita Hospital, Tokyo, Japan (M.N.).

2. Department of Medicine, Renal Disease & Hypertension, Loyola University, Chicago, IL (K.A.G.).

3. Veteran’s Administration, Nephrology, Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital (K.A.G.).

4. Department of Internal Medicine, Nephrology & Hypertension, Department of Nutrition and Integrative Physiology, and Immunology, Inflammation and Infectious Disease Initiative (B.M.W.), University of Utah, Salt Lake City.

5. Division of Clinical Epigenetics, Research Center for Advanced Science & Technology, The University of Tokyo, Japan (T.F.).

Abstract

Salt-sensitive hypertension (SS-HT) is characterized by blood pressure elevation in response to high dietary salt intake and is considered to increase the risk of cardiovascular and renal morbidity. Although the mechanisms responsible for SS-HT are complex, the kidneys are known to play a central role in the development of SS-HT and the salt sensitivity of blood pressure (SSBP). Moreover, several factors influence renal function and SSBP, including the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, sympathetic nervous system, obesity, and aging. A phenotypic characteristic of SSBP is aberrant activation of the renin-angiotensin system and sympathetic nervous system in response to excessive salt intake. SSBP is also accompanied by a blunted increase in renal blood flow after salt loading, resulting in sodium retention and SS-HT. Obesity is associated with inappropriate activation of the aldosterone mineralocorticoid receptor pathway and renal sympathetic nervous system in response to excessive salt, and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists and renal denervation attenuate sodium retention and inhibit salt-induced blood pressure elevation in obese dogs and humans. SSBP increases with age, which has been attributed to impaired renal sodium handling and a decline in renal function, even in the absence of kidney disease. Aging-associated changes in renal hemodynamics are accompanied by significant alterations in renal hormone levels and renal sodium handling, resulting in SS-HT. In this review, we focus mainly on the contribution of renal function to the development of SS-HT.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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