Publication | Open Access
Abnormal red blood cell ion transport and hypertension. The People's Gas Company study.
76
Citations
27
References
1983
Year
Gas Company StudyHypertensionHeart FailureElectrolyte DisorderChicago PeopleBlood PressureAnemiaMetabolic SyndromeBody CompositionHematologyElectrolyte DisturbanceChronic Kidney DiseaseRenal PharmacologyCardiologyHealth SciencesBlood Pressure MonitoringEndocrine HypertensionSodium HomeostasisAntihypertensive TherapyHypertensive EmergenciesCardiovascular ReactivityVascular BiologyDiuretic ResistanceWhite MenPotassium HomeostasisCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyBlood Pressure ControlMedicineBlood TransfusionAnesthesiology
A population-based survey of 134 white men, recruited from the Chicago People's Gas Company labor force, was carried out to examine the association between sodium-lithium (Na-Li) countertransport and hypertension. Of the 134 participants in this industry-sponsored periodic health examination, 64 were normotensive and 70 were either taking antihypertensive medications or had a systolic pressure greater than or equal to 140 or a diastolic pressure greater than or equal to 90 mm Hg. The hypertensives were older and more overweight. Countertransport was significantly higher in hypertensives than in normotensives. Among the three subgroups of hypertensives--untreated, borderline (140/90 to 160/95 mm Hg), untreated definite (over 160/95 mm Hg), and treated--an increase in countertransport was consistently observed, significant for the latter two groups. The relationship between countertransport and hypertension was independent of overweight, with countertransport being significantly related to both blood pressure and overweight. Altered ion transport may play an important role in the etiology and/or pathophysiology of hypertension.
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