Increased blood pressure and erythrocyte sodium/lithium countertransport activity are not inherited in diabetic nephropathy.
Genetic predisposition to essential hypertension, represented by maximal erythrocyte sodium/lithium countertransport activity, has been suggested as a marker for the risk of developing clinical nephropathy in Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. To evaluate this hypothesis we measured arterial blood pressure and maximal sodium/lithium countertransport activity of erythrocytes in 80 parents of 49 Type 1 diabetic patients with clinical nephropathy, 78 parents of 49 normoalbuminuric patients and 17 age-matched non-diabetic individuals. The two diabetic groups were carefully matched. In the two groups of parents blood pressure and cell sodium/lithium countertransport activity showed no significant differences (137/83 vs 133/81 mm Hg and 0.33 vs 0.32 mmol/(1 cells x h) respectively). The proportion of parents who had died or received antihypertensive drugs was similar in the two groups. The patients with Type 1 diabetes had significantly higher sodium/lithium countertransport compared to the 39 non-diabetic control subjects independently of the presence or absence of nephropathy (p less than 0.002). However, patients with nephropathy tended to have higher sodium/lithium countertransport activity than normoalbuminuric patients (0.48 vs 0.41 mmol/(1 cells x h), p = 0.06). We conclude that genetic predispositions to essential hypertension and increased maximal erythrocyte sodium/lithium countertransport activity do not appear to be risk markers for the development of clinical nephropathy in Type 1 diabetic patients.[1]References
- Increased blood pressure and erythrocyte sodium/lithium countertransport activity are not inherited in diabetic nephropathy. Jensen, J.S., Mathiesen, E.R., Nørgaard, K., Hommel, E., Borch-Johnsen, K., Funder, J., Brahm, J., Parving, H.H., Deckert, T. Diabetologia (1990) [Pubmed]
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