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Citations to this article

Studies on the Mechanism of Sodium Excretion during Drug-induced Vasodilatation in the Dog
Stephen Z. Fadem, … , Meyer D. Lifschitz, Jay H. Stein
Stephen Z. Fadem, … , Meyer D. Lifschitz, Jay H. Stein
Published March 1, 1982
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1982;69(3):604-610. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI110487.
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Research Article

Studies on the Mechanism of Sodium Excretion during Drug-induced Vasodilatation in the Dog

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Abstract

The administration of vasodilating agents such as bradykinin and acetylcholine cause an increase in urinary sodium excretion. Yet the mechanisms involved in this natriuretic effect are not clear. Recent studies with another renal vasodilator, secretin have shown this drug also causes a profound increase in renal blood flow but without major changes in sodium excretion. To attempt to delineate the basis of this difference in sodium excretion with these drugs, the renal functional effects of secretin and bradykinin were compared at an equivalent vasodilating dose. Bradykinin increased renal blood flow from 222 to 342 ml/min, urine volume from 0.2 to 1.2 ml/min, and urine sodium excretion from 28 to 115 μeq/min. Urine osmolality fell from 1,230 to 401 mosmol/kg. Secretin caused a comparable increase in renal blood flow (216 to 325 ml/min) while changes in urine flow, sodium excretion, and urine osmolality were significantly less.

Authors

Stephen Z. Fadem, Guillermo Hernandez-Llamas, Ram V. Patak, Steven G. Rosenblatt, Meyer D. Lifschitz, Jay H. Stein

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