September 28, 2005
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Mary Jane Gore
434-924-9241
mjgore@virginia.edu
New Grant to Unlock Secrets of High Blood Pressure
Dr. Carey and his team hope to uncover the normal body defense process that involves salt and water retention and high blood pressure, scientifically termed pressure-natriuresis.
In normal humans and animals, an increase in blood pressure signals the kidneys to excrete more salt and water. However, the substance that controls this normal process at the cellular and molecular level in the kidney is not understood. Carey has evidence that a substance manufactured by tubule cells in the kidneys of normal animals, called cyclic GMP, is released in response to an increase in pressure and increases the kidney's ability to excrete salt and water, leading in turn to a reduction in blood pressure.
This pressure-natriuresis mechanism is of critical importance in the pathway toward developing high blood pressure, because this mechanism is markedly defective or absent in all animals and humans with high blood pressure. This research offers the promise of understanding how approximately one quarter of the adult population in the
Carey is the 2005 recipient of the Endocrine Society’s Distinguished Physician Award – presented annually to recognize outstanding contributions to the practice of clinical endocrinology.
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