Renal divalent cation excretion in secondary hypertension

Clin Sci (Lond). 1992 Nov;83(5):561-5. doi: 10.1042/cs0830561.

Abstract

1. To determine whether abnormal renal calcium excretion is unique to primary genetic hypertension, blood pressure and 24 h urinary excretion of calcium, magnesium, sodium and creatinine were measured in deoxycorticosterone-saline and two-kidney, one-clip Goldblatt hypertensive rats and in their respective controls on low (0.2%) and high (1.8%) dietary calcium intakes. 2. Calcium supplementation lowered blood pressure (P < 0.05) in deoxycorticosterone-saline rats and in control saline-loaded rats, raised blood pressure in two-kidney, one clip rats, and had no effect in sham-operated control rats. 3. On both diets, calcium excretion was higher in hypertensive than in normotensive rats. The high calcium diet increased urinary calcium excretion in all rats, but the changes in urinary calcium excretion closely paralleled the diet-induced changes in blood pressure. Thus, urinary calcium excretion in deoxycorticosterone-saline animals, in whom calcium lowered blood pressure the most, rose the least (107%). Urinary calcium excretion rose the most in two-kidney, one-clip animals (1113%), whose blood pressure also rose the most. 4. Urinary magnesium excretion was also abnormal in hypertensive rats compared with normotensive rats, falling on the high compared with the low calcium diet in normotensive rats, but not in either hypertensive strain. Furthermore, urinary magnesium excretion was closely linked to urinary calcium excretion in saline-loaded control rats (r = 0.78; P = 0.008), but was dissociated from urinary calcium excretion in deoxycorticosterone-saline rats (r = 0.02; not significant).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Calcium / urine*
  • Calcium, Dietary / administration & dosage
  • Hypertension, Renovascular / physiopathology*
  • Hypertension, Renovascular / urine
  • Kidney / physiopathology*
  • Magnesium / urine
  • Male
  • Rats
  • Rats, Wistar

Substances

  • Calcium, Dietary
  • Magnesium
  • Calcium