4.5 Article

High sodium intake differentially impacts brachial artery dilation when evaluated with reactive versus active hyperemia in salt resistant individuals

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 134, Issue 2, Pages 277-287

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00461.2022

Keywords

antioxidant; flow-mediated dilation; oxidative stress; salt resistant; vascular function

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This study aimed to determine the effect of high sodium intake on upper limb arterial dilation in response to reactive and active hyperemia in salt resistant individuals. The results showed that high sodium intake significantly reduced reactive hyperemia-induced arterial dilation, but had no effect on exercise-induced arterial dilation.
This study sought to determine if high sodium (HS) intake in salt resistant (SR) individuals attenuates upper limb arterial dilation in response to reactive (occlusion) and active (exercise) hyperemia, two stimuli with varying vasodilatory mechanisms, and the role of oxidative stress in this response. Ten young, SR participants (9 males, 1 female) consumed a 7-day HS (6,900 mg/day) and a 7-day recommended sodium intake (RI: 2,300 mg/day) diet in a randomized order. On the last day of each diet, brachial artery (BA) function was evaluated via reactive (RH-FMD: 5 min of cuff occlusion) and active [handgrip (HG) exercise] hyperemia after consumption of both placebo (PL) and antioxidants (AO). The HS diet significantly elevated sodium excretion (P < 0.05), but mean arterial blood pressure was unchanged. During the PL condition, the HS diet significantly reduced RH-FMD when com-pared with RI diet (P = 0.01), but this reduction was significantly restored (P = 0.01) when supplemented with AO (HS + PL: 5.9 +/- 3.4; HS + AO: 8.2 +/- 2.7; RI + PL: 8.9 +/- 4.7; RI + AO: 7.0 +/- 2.1%). BA shear-to-dilation slopes, evaluated across all HG exer-cise workloads, were not significantly different across sodium intervention or AO supplementation. In SR individuals, HS intake impaired BA function when assessed via RH-FMD, but was restored with acute AO consumption suggesting oxidative stress as a contributor to this dysfunction. However, exercise-induced BA dilation was unaltered, potentially implicating an inability of HS intake to influence the mechanisms responsible for effectively maintaining skeletal muscle perfusion during exercise. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study examined if high sodium (HS) intake in salt resistant (SR) individuals attenuates brachial artery (BA) flow-mediated dilation in response to reactive (occlusion) and active (exercise) hyperemia. In SR individuals, HS intake impaired reactive hyperemia-induced BA dilation, but not exercise-induced BA dilation. This finding suggests that although brachial artery nitric oxide bioavailability may be reduced following HS intake, the redundant mechanisms associated with adequate upper limb blood flow regulation during exercise are maintained.

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