Role of aldosterone in the antihypertensive effect of spironolactone in essential hypertension.
In order to evaluate the relationship between aldosterone status and the blood pressure-lowering effect of spironolactone, 38 patients with essential hypertension were treated with spironolactone (400 mg/day) during one week in hospital on a rigidly sodium-restricted diet. The degree of hyperaldosteronism was assessed by the aldosterone secretory rate after 5 days of salt loading (315 mmol Na+/day). The mean arterial pressure decreased 5.6% (range, -21 to +8%). When the patients were divided into subgroups with low and normal renin activity, there was no difference in the change in mean arterial pressure (-5.0% and -6.1%). When the patients were divided into three groups with low, normal, and supranormal aldosterone secretory rates, the last group had a significantly greater fall in blood pressure after the spironolactone than the other groups (-1.0, -7.1, -11.1%). Thus there was a correlation between the aldosterone secretory rate after sodium loading and the blood pressure-lowering effect of spironolactone (r = -0.53, p less than 0.01). The blood pressure-lowering effect was not related to changes in body weight, kidney function, or plasma electrolytes. Our findings do not provide solid arguments for the view that the blood pressure-lowering effect of high dose spironolactone is due to its antimineralocorticoid activity, but the correlation between the degree of hyperaldosteronism and the blood pressure-lowering effect strongly suggests that aldosterone does play a role in the genesis or maintenance of the hypertension in these patients.[1]References
- Role of aldosterone in the antihypertensive effect of spironolactone in essential hypertension. Benraad, H., Drayer, J., Hoefnagels, W., Kloppenborg, P., Benraad, T. Clin. Pharmacol. Ther. (1978) [Pubmed]
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