These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Effect of L-arginine infusion on systemic and renal hemodynamics in hypertensive patients.
    Author: Higashi Y, Oshima T, Ozono R, Matsuura H, Kambe M, Kajiyama G.
    Journal: Am J Hypertens; 1999 Jan; 12(1 Pt 1):8-15. PubMed ID: 10075378.
    Abstract:
    This study was designed to compare the renal endothelial function in patients with essential hypertension and normal renal function with that in hypertensive patients with renal insufficiency. We studied the effects of L-arginine (500 mg/kg intravenously over 30 min) on renal hemodynamics in 30 normotensive control subjects, 32 patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension who had normal renal function, and seven hypertensive patients with renal insufficiency who had a serum creatinine concentration >2.0 mg/mL and a glomerular filtration rate <50 mL/min/1.48 m2. L-Arginine infusion similarly reduced the mean blood pressure between the three groups (normotensive: -9.7% +/- 0.7%, hypertensives with normal renal function: -10.2% +/- 0.8%, and hypertensives with renal insufficiency: -8.2% +/- 1.3%). The L-arginine-induced decrease in renal vascular resistance was smaller in essential hypertensive patients than in normotensive subjects (-11.0% +/- 2.2 v -19.8% +/- 2.1%, P <.05). However, L-arginine had no effect on the renal vascular resistance in hypertensive patients with renal insufficiency (1.6% +/- 4.8%). Urine nitrite/nitrate levels in response to L-arginine significantly increased in the three groups in the following order: patients with renal insufficiency (47% +/- 15%), essential hypertensive patients (87% +/- 10%), and normotensive subjects (129% +/- 12%). The glomerular filtration rate was unaffected by L-arginine in normotensive and essential hypertensive patients (3.1% +/- 2.4% and 4.2% +/- 2.5%), but significantly decreased in hypertensive patients with renal insufficiency (-13.7% +/- 6.1%). These findings suggest that the ability of the L-arginine-nitric oxide-cGMP pathway to relax the renal vascular tone may be impaired in essential hypertensive patients and more markedly blunted in hypertensive patients with renal insufficiency, in parallel with increasing serum creatinine concentrations.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]