Schreij G, van Es P N, Schiffers P M, de Leeuw P W
Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Blood Press. 1994 Nov;3(6):370-4. doi: 10.3109/08037059409102289.
Immunoreactive endothelin (ir-ET) levels were measured in the renal veins and aorta of 43 untreated hypertensive patients immediately before renal angiography. None of the patients used antihypertensive medication. Twenty-seven patients had renal artery stenosis, 17 of which were unilateral and 10 bilateral. Seven of the 17 patients with unilateral renal artery stenosis had an elevated renin ratio. Of the 16 patients with essential hypertension 6 had a unilateral small kidney with a normal blood supply. Although there was a trend towards higher levels of ir-ET in patients with renal artery stenosis, no significant differences in endothelin levels (venous or arterial) were found between different groups of patients or groups of kidneys. More than 75% of kidneys extracted endothelin, there being no significant differences between groups of kidneys. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that endothelin levels and renal endothelin extraction are comparable in essential hypertension and in hypertension associated with renal artery stenosis. Whereas renal uptake or endothelin is the rule, some kidneys, however, release this peptide irrespective of the presence or absence of renal artery stenosis.