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1 Department
of Medical Physiology,
Effects of urodilatin (5, 10, 20, and 40 ng · kg
1 · min
1)
infused over 2 h on separate study days were studied in eight normal subjects with use of a randomized, double-blind protocol. All doses
decreased renal plasma flow (hippurate clearance, 13-37%) and
increased fractional Li+ clearance
(7-22%) and urinary Na+
excretion (by 30, 76, 136, and 99% at 5, 10, 20, and 40 ng · kg
1 · min
1,
respectively). Glomerular filtration rate did not increase
significantly with any dose. The two lowest doses decreased cardiac
output (7 and 16%) and stroke volume (10 and 20%) without changing
mean arterial blood pressure and heart rate. The two highest doses elicited larger decreases in stroke volume (17 and 21%) but also decreased blood pressure (6 and 14%) and increased heart rate (15 and
38%), such that cardiac output remained unchanged. Hematocrit and
plasma protein concentration increased with the three highest doses.
The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system was inhibited by the three
lowest doses but activated by the hypotensive dose of 40 ng · kg
1 · min
1.
Plasma vasopressin increased by factors of up to 5 during infusion of
the three highest doses. Atrial natriuretic peptide immunoreactivity (including urodilatin) and plasma cGMP increased dose dependently. The
urinary excretion rate of albumin was elevated up to 15-fold (37 ± 17 µg/min). Use of a newly developed assay revealed that baseline
urinary urodilatin excretion rate was low (<10 pg/min) and that
fractional excretion of urodilatin remained below 0.1%. The results
indicate that even moderately natriuretic doses of urodilatin exert
protracted effects on systemic hemodynamic, endocrine, and renal
functions, including decreases in cardiac output and renal blood flow,
without changes in arterial pressure or glomerular filtration rate, and
that filtered urodilatin is almost completely removed by the renal tubules.
atrial natriuretic factor; cardiac output; renal hemodynamics; sodium excretion; albuminuria
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