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Acute effects of combined vasodilation and beta‐adrenoceptor blockade with prizidilol on renal function.
Author(s) -
Boehringer K,
Weidmann P,
Link L,
Bianchetti MG,
Schiffl H,
Reubi FC
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
british journal of clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.216
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1365-2125
pISSN - 0306-5251
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2125.1983.tb01484.x
Subject(s) - filtration fraction , renal function , renal blood flow , medicine , plasma renin activity , endocrinology , blood pressure , essential hypertension , effective renal plasma flow , aldosterone , pah clearance , renal circulation , hydralazine , chemistry , renin–angiotensin system
1 The effects of a single oral dose of 600 mg of prizidilol on renal function were studied 5 to 6 h after dosing in six normal subjects and eight patients with essential hypertension. 2 Mean arterial blood pressure was reduced to 92% of the control value in normal subjects and to 75% in hypertensive patients. Heart rate increased slightly. 3 In normal subjects, effective renal plasma flow was increased to 107% of control values while glomerular filtration rate (83%), filtration fraction (79%), sodium (84%) and potassium (50%) clearances were significantly decreased. 4 In hypertensive subjects, effective renal plasma flow was increased to 120% of control values, while glomerular filtration rate (67%), filtration fraction (57%), sodium (27%) and potassium (72%) clearances were significantly decreased. 5 Plasma noradrenaline increased significantly in normal subjects (150%) and in patients (173%). Plasma renin activity, aldosterone and epinephrine levels did not change consistently. 6 The results indicate that the acute effects of prizidilol on blood pressure and renal function are more marked in hypertensive than in normotensive subjects. Prizidilol increases renal plasma flow like hydralazine and depresses glomerular filtration rate and fractional sodium excretion like endralazine. In addition to the fall in arterial pressure, efferent vasodilation and/or a specific effect on the glomerular ultrafiltration coefficient Kf may account for the striking decrease in filtration fraction.