Abstract
In 11 normotensive patients with biopsy verified chronic glomerulonephritis and 14 controls, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), proximal and distal tubular handling of sodium determined by the lithium clearance technique, and overall tubular sodium handling determined by absolute and fractional sodium excretion were measured before, during and after intravenous infusion of a 2.5% sodium chloride solution. Patients and controls were comparable by means of GFR in that no significant differences were found between the two groups either before, during or after sodium chloride infusion. During infusion both groups responded by a decrease in GFR (p<0.01 in both groups). Patients exhibited an increased natriuretic response during infusion both when measured as absolute and fractional sodium excretion (p<0.05 both). During the infusion the increase in absolute proximal output and decrease in fractional proximal and distal tubular sodium reabsorption were more pronounced in patients than in controls (p<0.05). It is concluded that patients with chronic glomerulonephritis at a very early stage of the disease where blood pressure and GFR are still normal respond with exaggerated natriuresis to hypertonic sodium chloride infusion. The exaggerated natriuresis is due to a decreased fractional proximal tubular sodium reabsorption in response to sodium loading.