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  • Title: Acute renal effects of felodipine in hypertensive patients with kidney disease.
    Author: Huysmans FT, van Hamersvelt HW, Sluiter HE, Wetzels JF, Koene RA.
    Journal: Kidney Int Suppl; 1992 May; 36():S106-9. PubMed ID: 1614059.
    Abstract:
    In contrast to other types of directly acting vasodilators, calcium antagonists promote sodium excretion. It is not well established, however, whether these drugs also induce natriuresis in hypertensive patients with renal disease. Therefore, we studied the acute effects of the dihydropyridine calcium antagonist felodipine in nine such patients (CCr 68 +/- 19 ml/min) and 12 healthy normotensive subjects. In both the hypertensive patients and the normotensive subjects total and fractional sodium excretion rose during the first 40 minutes of intravenous felodipine infusion; in the hypertensive patients this rise of sodium excretion was positively correlated to the initial glomerular filtration rate (GFR) (r = 0.87, P less than 0.01). In the patients, during ongoing felodipine infusion, natriuresis was attenuated in the setting of a large continuing decrease of blood pressure. In contrast, in the normotensive subjects, in whom blood pressure did not fall any further, a steady rise of sodium excretion was observed. In both the hypertensive patients and the normotensive subjects GFR remained unchanged and renal vascular resistance decreased, whereas renal plasma flow increased only in the latter group. Changes in sodium excretion were not correlated to changes in renal hemodynamic parameters. It is concluded, that also in hypertensive patients with diminished renal function felodipine exerts a potentially advantageous natriuretic effect. However, this natriuretic effect is possibly less at lower GFR and seems to be attenuated by blood pressure reduction. The mechanism of this natriuretic effect as well as its contribution to the antihypertensive effect of felodipine still has to be clarified.
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