Dudenbostel Tanja, Ghazi Lama, Liu Mingchun, Li Peng, Oparil Suzanne, Calhoun David A
From the Division of Cardiovascular Disease, Vascular Biology, and Hypertension Program (T.D., L.G., M.L., S.O., D.A.C.), School of Medicine (M.L.), and Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health (P.L.), University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Hypertension. 2016 Oct;68(4):995-1003. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.116.07806. Epub 2016 Aug 15.
Prospective studies indicate that hyperaldosteronism is found in 20% of patients with resistant hypertension. A small number of observational studies in normotensive and hypertensive patients suggest a correlation between aldosterone levels and obesity while others could not confirm these findings. The correlation between aldosterone levels and body mass index (BMI) in patients with resistant hypertension has not been previously investigated. Our objective was to determine whether BMI is positively correlated with plasma aldosterone concentration, plasma renin activity, aldosterone:renin ratio, and 24-hour urinary aldosterone in black and white patients. We performed a cross-sectional analysis of a large diverse cohort (n=2170) with resistant hypertension. The relationship between plasma aldosterone concentration, plasma renin activity, aldosterone:renin ratio, 24-hour urinary aldosterone, and BMI was investigated for the entire cohort, by sex and race (65.3% white, 40.3% men). We demonstrate that plasma aldosterone concentration and aldosterone:renin ratio were significantly correlated to BMI (P<0.0001) across the first 3 quartiles, but not from the 3rd to 4th quartile of BMI. Plasma renin activity was not correlated with BMI. Twenty-four-hour urinary aldosterone was positively correlated across all quartiles of BMI for the cohort (P<0.0001) and when analyzed by sex (men P<0.0001; women P=0.0013) and race (P<0.05), and stronger for men compared with women (r=0.19, P<0.001 versus r=0.05, P=0.431, P=0.028) regardless of race. In both black and white patients, aldosterone levels were positively correlated to increasing BMI, with the correlation being more pronounced in black and white men. These findings suggest that obesity, particularly the abdominal obesity typical of men, contributes to excess aldosterone in patients with resistant hypertension.
前瞻性研究表明,20%的顽固性高血压患者存在醛固酮增多症。在血压正常和高血压患者中进行的少量观察性研究提示醛固酮水平与肥胖之间存在关联,而其他研究未能证实这些发现。此前尚未对顽固性高血压患者的醛固酮水平与体重指数(BMI)之间的相关性进行研究。我们的目的是确定在黑人和白人患者中,BMI是否与血浆醛固酮浓度、血浆肾素活性、醛固酮/肾素比值以及24小时尿醛固酮呈正相关。我们对一个多样化的大型队列(n = 2170)的顽固性高血压患者进行了横断面分析。针对整个队列、按性别和种族(65.3%为白人,40.3%为男性)研究了血浆醛固酮浓度、血浆肾素活性、醛固酮/肾素比值、24小时尿醛固酮与BMI之间的关系。我们证明,在前三个四分位数范围内,血浆醛固酮浓度和醛固酮/肾素比值与BMI显著相关(P < 0.0001),但在BMI的第三个到第四个四分位数之间不相关。血浆肾素活性与BMI不相关。对于该队列,24小时尿醛固酮在BMI的所有四分位数之间均呈正相关(P < 0.0001),按性别分析时(男性P < 0.0001;女性P = 0.0013)以及按种族分析时(P < 0.05)也是如此,且男性的相关性强于女性(r = 0.19,P < 0.001对比r = 0.05,P = 0.431,P = 0.028),与种族无关。在黑人和白人患者中,醛固酮水平均与BMI升高呈正相关,且在黑人和白人男性中这种相关性更为明显。这些发现表明,肥胖,尤其是男性典型的腹型肥胖,会导致顽固性高血压患者醛固酮过量。