Primary aldosteronism not only results in hypertension but also stiffer arteries. The time course and factors predicting the reversal of arterial stiffness after treatment are unclear. We prospectively enrolled 102 patients with aldosterone-producing adenoma (APA) from March 2006 to January 2012. We measured the pulse wave velocity (PWV) between brachial-ankle (baPWV) and heart-ankle (haPWV) before, 6 and 12 months after their adrenalectomy. After treatment, the PWV decreased significantly during the first 6 months (both p < 0.001), but no further reduction in the following 6 months. The determinant factors for baseline baPWV were age, duration of hypertension, and baseline systolic blood pressure (SBP) in multivariate linear regression analysis, similar with baseline haPWV (determinants: age, duration of hypertension, baseline SBP and diastolic blood pressure (DBP)). In multivariate linear regression analysis, the decrease in DBP at 6 months (ΔDBP0-6mo) and baseline baPWV were significantly associated with the decrease in baPWV at 6 months (ΔbaPWV0-6mo). The associated factors of the change in haPWV at 6 months (ΔhaPWV0-6mo) were baseline haPWV, ΔDBP0-6mo and change in log-transformed plasma renin activity. Our result suggested that reversal of arterial stiffness in APA patients occurred early after adrenalectomy and determined by baseline vascular condition, hemodynamic factors, and humoral factors.
Excess of aldosterone induces cardiac diastolic dysfunction, which is reversible by adrenalectomy. TIMP-1 is associated with the aldosterone-induced diastolic dysfunction.
Severe renal fibrosis often occurs in obstructive kidney disease, not only in the obstructed kidney but also in the contralateral kidney, causing renal dysfunction. Although the mechanisms of injury in obstructed kidney have been studied for years, the pathogenesis of fibrosis in the contralateral kidney remains largely unknown. Here, we examined long-term unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO) model in male Sprague–Dawley rats and found that macrophage-to-myofibroblast transition (MMT) is contributing to renal fibrosis in the contralateral kidney of UUO rats. Interestingly, this process was attenuated by treatment of eplerenone, a specific blocker of the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR). In-vitro, stimulating MR in primary cultured or cell line macrophages enhances MMT, which were also inhibited by MR blockade. Collectively, these findings provide a plausible mechanism for UUO-induced injury in the contralateral kidney, suggesting the benefit of using MR blockage as a part of treatment to UUO to protect the contralateral kidney thereby preserve renal function.
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