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Blood pressure (BP) responses to sodium intake show great variation, discriminating salt-sensitive (SS) from salt-resistant (SR) individuals. The pathophysiology behind salt sensitivity is still not fully elucidated. We aimed to investigate salt-induced effects on body fluid, vascular tone, and autonomic cardiac response with regard to BP change in healthy normotensive individuals. We performed a randomized crossover study in 51 normotensive individuals with normal body mass index and estimated glomerular filtration rate. Subjects followed both a low-Na diet (LSD, <50 mmol/day) and a high-Na diet (HSD, >200 mmol/day). Cardiac output, systemic vascular resistance (SVR), and cardiac autonomous activity, through heart rate variability and cross-correlation baroreflex sensitivity (xBRS), were assessed with noninvasive continuous finger BP measurements. In a subset, extracellular volume (ECV) was assessed by iohexol measurements. Subjects were characterized as SS if mean arterial pressure (MAP) increased ≥3 mmHg after HSD. After HSD, SS subjects (25%) showed a 6.1-mmHg (SD 1.9) increase in MAP. No differences between SS and SR in body weight, cardiac output, or ECV were found. SVR was positively correlated with Delta BP ( = 0.31, = 0.03). xBRS and heart rate variability were significantly higher in SS participants compared to SR participants after both HSD and LSD. Sodium loading did not alter heart rate variability within groups. Salt sensitivity in normotensive individuals is associated with an inability to decrease SVR upon high salt intake that is accompanied by alterations in autonomous cardiac regulation, as reflected by decreased xBRS and heart rate variability. No discriminatory changes upon high salt were observed among salt-sensitive individuals in body weight and ECV. Extracellular fluid expansion in normotensive individuals after salt loading is present in both salt-sensitive and salt-resistant individuals and is not discriminatory to the blood pressure response to sodium loading in a steady-state measurement. In normotensive subjects, the ability to sufficiently vasodilate seems to play a pivotal role in salt sensitivity. In a normotensive cohort, differences in sympathovagal balance are also present in low-salt conditions rather than being affected by salt loading. Whereas treatment and prevention of salt-sensitive blood pressure increase are mostly focused on renal sodium handling and extracellular volume regulation, our study suggests that an inability to adequately vasodilate and altered autonomous cardiac functioning are additional key players in the pathophysiology of salt-sensitive blood pressure increase.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.00076.2023 | DOI Listing |
Medicine (Baltimore)
August 2025
Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.
Falls and their consequences are perhaps the greatest moderators of quality of life (QoL) among older adults with hypertension. However, limited studies have been conducted to identify associations between fall risk and awareness, anthropometric, balance, and QoL among older women with different blood pressure patterns within the Pakistani population. This cross-sectional study examined the relationship between anthropometric measurements, postural balance (PB), fear of falling, fall risk awareness, and QoL in older females with hypersensitive status in Lahore, Pakistan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuant Imaging Med Surg
September 2025
Department of Radiology, Dangyang People's Hospital, Yichang, China.
Background: The coronary artery calcium score (CACS) reflects coronary atherosclerosis burden, but its predictive value in different populations remains to be fully elucidated. The aim of this study was to investigate the predictive value of CACS for cardiovascular events in different patient populations.
Methods: One hundred patients (mean age 65.
Echocardiography
September 2025
Department of Ultrasound, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.
Objective: To evaluate the left atrial function in pregnant women with hypertension versus those with normotension using three-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography (3D-STE) and investigate the association between left atrial dysfunction and adverse pregnancy outcomes.
Methods: A total of 94 pregnant women registered at the Tiantan Hospital between August 2023 and October 2024 who underwent comprehensive prenatal exams were enrolled. They were divided into three groups according to their blood pressure: gestational hypertension (GH), preeclampsia (PE), and normotensive control groups.
Medicina (Kaunas)
July 2025
Instituto de Investigación Biosanitaria de Granada (ibs.GRANADA), 18012 Granada, Spain.
: A commonly observed phenomenon in outpatient oncological patients is the appearance of hypotension not attributable to other causes in hypertensive patients undergoing oncological treatment. Once antihypertensive treatment is discontinued, patients remain normotensive after the oncological treatment ends. The objective of this research is to analyze our experience with this phenomenon and try to provide an explanation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med
August 2025
Division of Internal Medicine 3, University Hospital St. Pölten, 3100 St. Pölten, Austria.
Arterial hypertension (HTN) is the leading modifiable cardiovascular risk factor for overall mortality worldwide. In Austria, 1.6 million individuals above the age of 15, representing 20% of the total population and 70% of adults aged 65 and older, suffer from HTN.
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