Abstract
The aim of this study was to test basal and after treatment erythrocyte sodium and calcium concentrations, and calcium-ATPase activity and platelet cytosolic free calcium and pH in 20 normotensive controls, 20 hemodialysis-dependent chronic renal failure patients and in 18 essential hypertensives.
Prior to treatment, essential hypertensive and urenic patients presented similar higher platelet calcium concentrations and lower pH than the normotensive control group. The erythrocyte sodium, calcium, and magnesium concentrations were only significantly elevated in chronic renal failure, with a significant decrease in the calcium-ATPase activity in the latter population.
Hemodialysis partially reversed these intracellular ionic abnormalities with normalization of platelet pH. Significant correlations have been noted between weight loss and decreases in platelet calcium concentration (r = 0.60, p<0.01) or in erythrocyte sodium (r = 0.50, p<0.05). The systolic blood pressure decrease was only correlated to the increase in calcium-ATPase activity (r = 0.57, p<0.05).
Antihypertensive treatment (captopril and nifedipine) only tended to normalize the intracellular calcium concentration with correlation between the decrease of the latter and blood pressure decrease (r = 0.64 for the systolic blood pressure and 0.68 for the diastolic blood pressure, p<0.01).