Gruska Sybille, Jendral Ingo, Rettig Rainer, Kraatz Günter
Department A of Internal Medicine, Ernst Moritz Arndt University Greifswald, Loefflerstrasse 23a, D-17487 Greifswald, Germany.
Clin Sci (Lond). 2003 Mar;104(3):323-7. doi: 10.1042/CS20020264.
The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that enhanced intracellular calcium signalling and increased sodium/lithium countertransport (Na(+)/Li(+) CT) activity may be associated with coronary heart disease (CHD) in non-diabetic patients with essential hypertension. Platelet-activating factor (PAF)-evoked rises in the intracellular calcium concentration (Ca(2+)) were measured in Epstein-Barr-virus-immortalized lymphoblasts from 62 hypertensive patients with CHD and 34 patients without CHD. Na(+)/Li(+) CT activity was assessed in erythrocytes from 80 hypertensive patients with CHD and 46 patients without CHD. Baseline values of unstimulated and PAF-stimulated Ca(2+) were not significantly different between hypertensive subjects with (baseline, 126+/-5 nmol/l; stimulated, 550+/-43 nmol/l) and without (baseline, 125+/-5 nmol/l; stimulated, 654+/-105 nmol/l) CHD. Similarly, Na(+)/Li(+) CT activity was not significantly different between the two groups (patients with CHD, 219+/-8 micromol x l(-1) x h(-1); patients without CHD, 234+/-10 micromol x l(-1) x h(-1)). We conclude that intracellular signal transduction, as indicated by PAF-induced rises in Ca(2+) and Na(+)/Li(+) CT activity, is not associated with an increased risk of CHD in non-diabetic patients with essential hypertension.