Blazy I, Guillot F, Laborde K, Dechaux M
Department of Physiology, Hopital Necker-Enfants Malades, Paris, France.
Scand J Clin Lab Invest. 1989 Sep;49(5):413-8. doi: 10.1080/00365518909089115.
We compared plasma active and inactive renin (prorenin) concentrations and activities in infants and children, as measured with a newly available direct immunoradiometric assay kit for active renin and a widely used enzymatic renin assay (plasma renin activity). The study was performed in 57 healthy infants and children under steady-state conditions and in eight subjects after orthostatic stimulation. Our study; (i) reports concentrations for active and inactive renin determined by the immunoradiometric assay in normal infants and children; (ii) confirms, by use of the immunoradiometric assay, the previously described decrease in plasma active and inactive renin, as measured by the enzymatic assay, with increasing age; and (iii) shows close correlations between the results obtained by immunoradiometric and enzymatic assays for active and inactive renin in normal infants and children.