Independent relations of left ventricular structure with the 24-h urinary excretion of sodium and aldosterone

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_DDE49C9E4B6B
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Independent relations of left ventricular structure with the 24-h urinary excretion of sodium and aldosterone
Title of the conference
15th European Meeting on Hypertension
Author(s)
Yu Jin, Kuznetsova Tatiana, Maillard Marc, Richart Tom, Thijs Lutgarde, Bochud Murielle, Herregods Marie-Christine, Burnier Michel, Fagard Robert, Staessen Jan A.
Address
Milan, Italy, June 12-16, 2009
ISBN
0167-5273
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2009
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
137
Series
International Journal of Cardiology
Pages
82
Language
english
Notes
Meeting Abstract
Abstract
Objective:
Previous studies reported on the association of left ventricular mass index (LVMI) with urinary sodium or with circulating or urinary aldosterone.We investigated the independent associations of LVMI with the urinary excretion of both sodium and aldosterone.
Design and method:
We randomly recruited 317 untreated subjects from a White population (45.1%women; mean age 48.2 years).Measurements included echocardiographic left ventricular (LV) properties, the 24 h urinary excretion of sodium and aldosterone, plasma renin activity (PRA), and proximal (RNaprox) and distal (RNadist) renal sodium reabsorption, assessed fromthe endogenous lithium clearance. Inmultivariable-adjusted models,we expressed changes in LVMI per 1 SD increase in the explanatory variables, while accounting for sex, age, systolic blood pressure and the waist-to-hip ratio.
Results:
LVMI increased independentlywith the urinary excretion of both sodium (+2.48 g/m2; P=0.005) and aldosterone (+2.63 g/m2; P=0.004). Higher sodium excretion was associated with increased mean wall thickness (MWT: +0.126 mm, P=0.054), but with no change in LV end-diastolic diameter (LVID: +0.12mm, P=0.64). In contrast, higher aldosterone excretion was associated with higher LVID (+0.54 mm; P=0.017), but with no change in MWT (+0.070mm; P=0.28).Higher RNadistwas associatedwith lower relativewall thickness (−0.81×10−2, P=0.017), because of opposite trends in LVID(+0.33 mm; P=0.13) and MWT (−0.130mm; P=0.040). LVMI was not associated with PRA or RNaprox.
Conclusions:
LVMI independently increased with both urinary sodium and aldosterone excretion. IncreasedMWT explained the association of LVMI with urinary sodium and increased LVID the association of LVMI with urinary aldosterone.
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Create date
28/05/2010 11:27
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:02
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