Elevated serum insulin levels in patients with essential hypertension and microalbuminuria

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Abstract

Hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, or both have been described in patients with essential hypertension. Previous work from our laboratory has shown that in hypertensive patients with microalbuminuria, dyslipidemia and abnormal patterns in the diurnal variations of blood pressure are frequently associated. Whether hyperinsulinemia and microalbuminuria are directly related has not been determined. To test this possibility, we measured the plasma insulin response to an oral glucose load in 25 patients with or without microalbuminuria and 20 normotensive control subjects. Serum lipid profile and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure were obtained. In the hypertensive patients as a group, the plasma insulin response to glucose (evaluated as the insulin area under the curve) was significantly enhanced compared with a group of 20 normotensive healthy control subjects (46 311 ± 3745 and 27 557 ± 2563 pmol/Lx2 hours, P

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Bianchi, S., Bigazzi, R., Valtriani, C., Chiapponi, I., Sgherri, G., Baldari, G., … Campese, V. M. (1994). Elevated serum insulin levels in patients with essential hypertension and microalbuminuria. Hypertension, 23(6 I), 681–687. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.23.6.681

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