盐与高血压研究综述。

B Folkow
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引用次数: 29

摘要

从生理学的角度来看,盐摄入对血压稳态的重要性进行了严格的调查。普通老鼠和绝大多数人类似乎都能忍受相当大范围的摄入量,而对血压的影响很小。此外,如果只考虑体型和代谢率的差异,这两个物种的“生理设定值”似乎都处于非常相似的水平。毫无疑问,在摄入量范围的两端,风险都在增加,而那些摄入量低的人一直被忽视,尽管最近在老鼠身上进行了探索,也涉及到其中的机制。然而,在这两个物种中,基因差异也影响着盐的平衡,少数人表现出不同程度的“盐敏感”,显然这种情况在美国黑人中比在白人中更为常见。这可能很好地反映了有利于盐保存的机制的相对优势,这在某些环境中似乎是至关重要的。然而,当这些个体在现代社会中面临更自由的盐消费时,他们特定的盐平衡设置反而可能加重甚至加剧高血压,特别是当其他易感因素在手时。本文初步探讨了如何在不过多干扰绝大多数“耐盐者”的消费习惯和“生活质量”的情况下,最好地处理这种情况;此外,更多的研究应针对盐敏感亚群的识别和进一步分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Critical review of studies on salt and hypertension.

The importance of salt intake for blood pressure homeostasis is critically surveyed, from a physiological point of view. Both ordinary rats and the great majority of mankind appear to tolerate quite a wide range of intakes at only minor effects on blood pressure. Further, both species seem to have their "physiological setpoints" at closely similar levels, if only differences in body size and metabolic rate are considered. No doubt risks increase towards both end of the intake spectrum, where those at low intakes have been much neglected though they were recently explored in rats, also concerning the mechanisms involved. In both species, however, genetic differences affect also the salt balance, where a minority of human beings shows various degrees of "salt sensitivity", apparently more often so in e.g. American blacks than in whites. This may well reflect a relative dominance for mechanisms favouring salt conservation which, in some environments, seems to be of vital importance. However, when such individuals are confronted with the more liberal salt consumption in modern society, their particular setting of salt balance may rather serve to aggravate or even precipitate hypertension, especially when other predisposing elements are at hand. It is tentatively discussed how to best handle such situations without interfering too much with consumption habits and "quality of life" for the great majority of "salt resistants"; further that more research should be directed towards identification and further analyses of salt sensitive subgroups.

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