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  • Title: The renin system and atrial natriuretic hormone in congestive heart failure.
    Author: Laragh JH, Cody RJ, Covit AB, Atlas SA.
    Journal: Acta Med Scand Suppl; 1986; 707():45-53. PubMed ID: 2943142.
    Abstract:
    The renin angiotensin system is activated in the majority of patients with chronic congestive heart failure of moderate to severe symptomatology. Renin release may result from one of several different stimuli: renal tubular sodium delivery and sensing by the macula densa, sympathetic nervous system activity, and baroreceptor to changes in renal blood flow. Difficulties arise with an analysis of renin angiotensin system activity due to the necessity for diuretic therapy in the majority of these patients. Despite the presence of diuretic therapy, however, there is a wide range of renin angiotensin system activity. In evaluating this activity the administration of a converting enzyme inhibitor will block the contribution of angiotensin mediated vasoconstriction, thereby confirming the importance of the renin angiotensin system activity as a mediator of the long-term consequences of heart failure. In situations of low plasma renin activity, vasoconstriction is mediated by an alternate mechanism. The mechanisms of this non-renin mediated vasoconstriction are less apparent, but may include calcium mediated vasoconstriction, and the effects of increased cytosolic content. This low renin group of patients appear to be very sensitive to reversal of vasoconstriction by calcium channel antagonists, especially when converting enzyme inhibitors are ineffective. In an analysis of the factors that may result in renin release, tubular delivery of sodium to the macula densa may emerge as the most important regulator of renin release.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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