A B S T R A C T Urinary kallikrein excretion has been reported to be decreased in patients with essential hypertension and elevated in patients with primary aldosteronism as a reflection of mineralocorticoid activity. Low renin essential hypertension (LREH) has been postulated to result from excess production of an unknown mineralocorticoid(s ,ug/24 h for black normals) and a failure to achieve metabolic balance in 11/13 patients. Thus, the lesser kallikrein stimulation appeared to result from these two factors. Black and white hypertensives with creatinine clearance <80 ml/min had little increase in urinary kallikrein excretion with Florinef or low sodium diet.5 of 12 patients with primary aldosteronism or 17a-hydroxylase deficiency did not have an elevated urinary kallikrein excretion rate. Mild renal insufficiency may have contributed to this finding in two of these five patients. Nevertheless, this finding illustrates a limitation to the use of urinary kallikrein excretion rate as an index of mineralocorticoid activity. However, it appears that the majority of patients with LREH have no evidence for excess production of an unknown mineralocorticoid. The failure to find a decrease in urinary kallikrein excretion in racially matched patients with essential hypertension and normal renal function questions the postulate of a role of the kallikrein-kinin system in the initiation of essential hypertension.
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