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Short-term high salt intake reduces brachial artery and microvascular function in the absence of changes in blood pressure (CROSBI ID 223624)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Čavka, Ana ; Jukić, Ivana ; Ali, Mohamed ; Goslawski, Melissa ; Bian, Jing-Tan ; Wang, Edward ; Drenjančević, Ines ; Phillips, Shane A. Short-term high salt intake reduces brachial artery and microvascular function in the absence of changes in blood pressure // Journal of hypertension, 34 (2016), 4; 676-684. doi: 10.1097/HJH.0000000000000852

Podaci o odgovornosti

Čavka, Ana ; Jukić, Ivana ; Ali, Mohamed ; Goslawski, Melissa ; Bian, Jing-Tan ; Wang, Edward ; Drenjančević, Ines ; Phillips, Shane A.

engleski

Short-term high salt intake reduces brachial artery and microvascular function in the absence of changes in blood pressure

The aims of this study were to test the hypothesis that short-term high salt intake reduces macrovascular and microvascular endothelial function in the absence of changes in blood pressure and to determine whether acute exercise restores endothelial function after high salt in women. Twelve women were administered high salt (11 g of sodium chloride for 7 days) and then underwent a weightlifting session. Brachial artery flow-mediated dilation and nitroglycerin dilation were measured with ultrasound at baseline, after high salt, and after weightlifting. Subcutaneous fat tissue biopsies were obtained at baseline, after high salt, and after weightlifting. Resistance arteries from biopsies were cannulated for vascular reactivity measurements in response to flow [flow-induced dilation (FID)] and acetylcholine. Blood pressure was similar before and after high salt diet. Brachial flow-mediated dilation was reduced after high salt diet but was not affected by acute weightlifting. Brachial nitroglycerin dilations were similar before and after high salt. FID and acetylcholine-induced dilation of resistance arteries were similar to that of before and after high salt diet. FID and acetylcholine- induced dilation was not altered by weightlifting after high salt diet. However, Nv-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester significantly reduced FID at baseline and after exercise but had no effect dilator reactivity after high salt diet alone. These data suggest that high salt intake reduces brachial artery endothelial function and switches the mediator of vasodilation in the microcirculation to a non-nitric oxide-dependent mechanism in healthy adults and acute exercise may switch the dilator mechanism back to nitric oxide during high salt diet.

endothelium; flow-mediated dilation; high salt diet; microcirculation; resistance exercise

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Podaci o izdanju

34 (4)

2016.

676-684

objavljeno

0263-6352

10.1097/HJH.0000000000000852

Povezanost rada

Temeljne medicinske znanosti

Poveznice
Indeksiranost