MP BLAUSTEIN, JM HAMLYN - Annals of Internal Medicine, 1983 - Am Coll Physicians Excessive dietary intake of sodium appears to play a significant role in human
essential hypertension. The underlying mechanism may involve the excessive
secretion of a humoral natriuretic factor in response to the salt load. ... Cited by 49 - Related articles - All 2 versions
TT Petersen, MJ Mulvany - Blood vessels, 1984 - content.karger.com We have measured the relaxation of rat mesenteric small arteries (internal
diameter ca. 200 µm) from a potassium contracture under conditions where the
transplasmalemmal sodium gradient was altered. Adjustment of the sodium ... Cited by 16 - Related articles - All 5 versions
AF Brading, TW Lategan - Journal of Hypertension, 1985 - journals.lww.com 110 Journal of Hypertension 1985, Vol 3 No 2 and which can bind monovalent
cations less selectively, but does not translocate them when Ca ions occupy site
(b). This results in Na-Ca exchange with a stoichiometry of 3Na-lCa. ... Cited by 34 - Related articles - All 2 versions
GP GORDON JR - Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1984 - Endocrine Soc Abnormalities in sodium metabolism, including the presence of endogenous
circulating digitalis-like sodium transport inhibitors, have been implicated in
the genesis of essential hypertension. Digitalis has also been reported to ... Cited by 42 - Related articles - All 3 versions
SM Son, GY Huh, HS Lee - Korean J Comm Nutr, 2005 - komci.org The assessment of sodium intake is complex because of the variety and nature of
dietary sodium. This study intended to develop a dish frequency questionnaire
(DFQ) for estimating the habitual sodium intake and a short DFQ for ... Cited by 6 - Related articles - Cached - All 3 versions
[CITATION] Salt intake and nutritional problems in Korean
SM Son, GY Huh - Proceedings of spring symposium, pp7-25, The Korean …, 2002 Cited by 8 - Related articles
MP Blaustein, JM Hamlyn - The American journal of medicine, 1984 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Sodium plays a critical role in the etiology of essential hypertension, but the
mechanism by which excess dietary sodium actually leads to the elevation of
blood pressure is not understood. The hypothesis described shows how an ... Cited by 108 - Related articles
JM Hamlyn, MP Blaustein - American Journal of Physiology- Renal Physiology, 1986 - Am Physiological Soc A NUMBER OF PATHOPHYSIOLOGICAL STATES associated with high blood pressure
involve primary or secondary defects in the systems that regulate salt and water
bal- ance. Analysis of these conditions suggests that extra- cellular fluid ... Cited by 37 - Related articles - All 2 versions