Salt sensitivity and systemic hypertension in the elderly
- PMID: 3289354
- DOI: 10.1016/0002-9149(88)91098-3
Salt sensitivity and systemic hypertension in the elderly
Abstract
Aging in industrialized societies is accompanied by increases in the incidence and prevalence of hypertension, with a disproportionately greater increase occurring among aging blacks than among aging whites. This geriatric hypertension is generally of a salt-sensitive nature with a disproportionate frequency of isolated systolic hypertension. Although salt-taste acuity declines with age, salt sensitivity among the elderly does not appear to result from a compensatory increase in salt intake. Rather, age-related increases in salt sensitivity result, in part, from a reduced ability to appropriately excrete a salt load, which is due to a decline in renal function and to a reduced generation of natriuretic substances such as prostaglandin E2 and dopamine. Age-associated declines in the activity of membrane sodium/potassium-adenosine triphosphatase (Na/K-ATPase) may also contribute to geriatric hypertension because this results in increased intracellular sodium that may cause reduced sodium-calcium exchange and thereby increase intracellular calcium and vascular resistance. Reductions in cellular calcium efflux due to reduced calcium-ATPase activity may similarly cause an increase in intracellular calcium and vascular resistance. Increasing dietary calcium intake may represent an effective nonpharmacologic treatment for some salt-sensitive persons because it appears to reduce intracellular calcium by (1) suppressing parathyroid hormone-mediated calcium influx, (2) increasing Na/K-ATPase activity, and (3) reducing intravascular volume due to calcium-induced natriuresis.
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