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Review
. 1976 May 31;60(6):798-816.
doi: 10.1016/0002-9343(76)90893-7.

Renal prostaglandins and the regulation of blood pressure and sodium and water homeostasis

Review

Renal prostaglandins and the regulation of blood pressure and sodium and water homeostasis

J B Lee et al. Am J Med. .

Abstract

In addition to its well known prohypertensive role in various states of experimental and human hypertension, the kidney has also been shown to exert an antihypertensive "endocrine" function. According to this hypothesis, certain forms of experimental and human hypertension might not solely be the result of an excess in the activity of such renal pressor systems as the renin-angiotensin system and the sympathetic nervous system, but might also result from an absolute or relative deficiency of intra-renal vasodilator antihypertensive factors which might allow pressor systems to act unopposed to produce peripheral arteriolar vasoconstriction and sustained hypertension. At least four factors have been characterized in the kidney of various animal species and man which might be responsible for such an antihypertensive function. These are (1) the renomedullary prostaglandins (PGs), (2) the renomedullary antihypertensive neutral lipid, (3) antirenin phospholipid and (4) the renal kinins. This review is restricted to an examination of the possibility that the vasodepressor renomedullary prostaglandins (PGA and/or PGE) may, at least in part, mediate the so-called antihypertensive function of the kidney and participate in the regulation of renal blood flow and natriuresis by physiologic antagonism of various renal vasoconstrictor stimuli such as the renal renin-angiotensin and the sympathetic nervous systems.

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