Systemic and pulmonary hemodynamic effects of saralasin infusion in hypertension. Predictability of plasma renin status from hemodynamic changes.

1978 
Abstract Hemodynamic measurements were obtained before and after 30 minutes of saralasin infusion in 26 fasting adults with hypertension (25 men and 1 woman). Nine showed a depressor response with a decrease in mean intraarterial pressure greater than 20 mm Hg. Ten were nonresponders and seven had an agonistic response with an increase in mean arterial pressure of greater than 10 mm Hg. Heart rate, pulmonary arterial and wedge pressures and pulmonary vascular resistance were nearly identical in the three groups and remained unchanged. Cardiac index decreased from a mean of 2.76 ± 0.14 (standard error of the mean) to 2.48 ± 0.1 liters/min per m 2 in the nonresponders ( P 5 in the group with a depressor response ( P P It is concluded that (1) classification based solely on the response of arterial pressure to saralasin ignores important hemodynamic changes; (2) the response of cardiac index—no change in the patients with a depressor response and a reduction in nonresponders—suggests that endogenous angiotension II supports cardiac output in these groups; (3) a decrease in systemic vascular resistance is better than a decrease in mean arterial pressure as a predictor of the status of the plasma renin activity; and (4) lack of change in pulmonary vascular resistance suggests that endogenous angiotension II plays an insignificant role in maintaining the resistance of the pulmonary vasculature.
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