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Dietary sodium alters beta‐adrenergic receptor mediated vasodilation in men but not women
Author(s) -
Gullixson Leah R,
Kost Susan L,
Penheiter Alan R,
Turner Stephen T,
Nicholson Wayne T,
Joyner Michael J,
Eisenach John H
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.26.1_supplement.880.4
Subject(s) - vasodilation , endocrinology , medicine , sodium , brachial artery , dietary sodium , receptor , blood pressure , chemistry , organic chemistry
Dietary sodium loading decreases β‐adrenergic receptor mediated vasodilation in hypertensive men, and paradoxically increases this dilation in normotensive men; no information exists in women. The purpose of this investigation was to test the hypothesis that dietary sodium loading and restriction influences β‐receptor mediated vasodilation in a sex‐dependent manner. Healthy normotensive subjects consumed a high (400 mmol/day, n=36, mean age±SEM 23±1 yr, 23 women) or low (10 mmol/day, n=30, 30±1 yr, 14 women) sodium diet for 5 days prior to study. Forearm blood flow (FBF, plethysmography) responses to brachial artery administration of isoproterenol (ISO: 1, 3, 6, 12 ng/100 ml tissue/min) were measured before and after endothelial NO synthase inhibition with N G ‐monomethyl‐L‐arginine (L‐NMMA). Consistent with prior reports, the FBF response to ISO was greater in men on high sodium compared to men on low sodium (p=0.03, ISO‐by‐sodium interaction). The highest response to ISO was 16.6±1.7 and 11.0±1.1 ml/100 ml tissue/min (high vs. low, p=0.01). After LNMMA the men's response to ISO did not differ based on sodium. In contrast, in women dietary sodium did not affect the response to ISO before or after LNMMA. We conclude that dietary sodium alters β‐adrenergic receptor mediated vasodilation in men, which appears to be dependent on NO. This is the first study to suggest that these mechanisms of vasodilation are resistant to dietary sodium in women. Support: HL‐089331, CTSA RR‐024150