Plasma adrenomedullin concentrations in essential hypertension

M Kohno, T Hanehira, H Kano, T Horio, K Yokokawa… - …, 1996 - Am Heart Assoc
M Kohno, T Hanehira, H Kano, T Horio, K Yokokawa, M Ikeda, M Minami, K Yasunari…
Hypertension, 1996Am Heart Assoc
We designed the present study to assess any changes in plasma concentrations of the novel
vasorelaxant peptide adrenomedullin in patients with essential hypertension. Plasma
adrenomedullin concentrations were measured in 45 patients with untreated essential
hypertension, 15 patients with borderline hypertension, and 30 normotensive control
subjects. After 4 weeks of effective calcium channel blocker–based antihypertensive
therapy, adrenomedullin concentrations were measured again. The concentrations were …
Abstract
We designed the present study to assess any changes in plasma concentrations of the novel vasorelaxant peptide adrenomedullin in patients with essential hypertension. Plasma adrenomedullin concentrations were measured in 45 patients with untreated essential hypertension, 15 patients with borderline hypertension, and 30 normotensive control subjects. After 4 weeks of effective calcium channel blocker–based antihypertensive therapy, adrenomedullin concentrations were measured again. The concentrations were higher in hypertensive patients with increased serum creatinine levels or decreased glomerular filtration rates compared with borderline hypertensive patients and normotensive subjects, although values in normotensive and hypertensive individuals overlapped. Plasma adrenomedullin concentrations were positively correlated with serum creatinine levels and inversely correlated with glomerular filtration rates in the hypertensive patients, whereas adrenomedullin values were not correlated with blood pressure level, left ventricular mass index, or left ventricular ejection fraction. Despite blood pressure control with antihypertensive therapy, plasma adrenomedullin concentrations were not changed. Reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic analysis showed that a major component of immunoreactive adrenomedullin in the plasma of normotensive subjects and hypertensive patients is human adrenomedullin-(1-52). These results indicate that plasma adrenomedullin concentrations are elevated in many hypertensive patients with renal dysfunction and its major component is human adrenomedullin-(1-52).
Am Heart Assoc