Title of article :
The relationships between cortisol levels, insulin levels, and thyroid hormones with 24-h urinary sodium excretion in never treated essential hypertensive patients
Author/Authors :
Afsar، Baris نويسنده Associate Professor, Department of Nephrology, Konya Numune State Hospital, Selcuklu/Konya, Turkey , , Ay، Mahmut نويسنده General Practitioner, Department of Biochemistry, Konya Numune State Hospital, Selcuklu/Konya, Turkey ,
Abstract :
BACKGROUND: To study the relationship between cortisol, insulin, and thyroid hormone levels
with 24-h urinary sodium (Na) excretion levels in essential hypertensive patients.
METHODS: All patients underwent history taking, physical examination, blood pressure (BP)
measurement, 12 lead electocardiographic evaluation, routine urine analysis, biochemical
analysis including measurement of cortisol, insulin, and thyroid hormone levels, 24-h urine
collection to measure urinary Na and protein excretion and creatinine clearance.
RESULTS: In total, 68 newly diagnosed hypertensive patients were included. Spearman correlation
analysis revealed that 24-h urinary Na excretion was correlated with insulin levels
(? = ?0.473, P < 0.0001), serum cortisol levels (? = ?0.404, P= 0.0010) and creatinine clearance
(? = 0.407, P: 0.0010). Linear regression of independent factors has revealed that systolic BP
(B = 0.004, CI = 0.001-0.008, P = 0.0170), body mass index (B = 0.014, CI = 0.005-0.023,
P = 0.0030), being male (B = 0.077, CI = 0.001-0.153, P = 0.0480), creatinine clearance
(B = 0.003, CI = 0.001-0.006, P = 0.0120) and insulin levels (B = ?0.008, CI = ?0.014 to ?0.002,
P = 0.0070) were independently related with logarithmically converted 24-h Na excretion.
CONCLUSION: In conclusion, we found that insulin but not cortisol and thyroid hormone levels
were independently related with 24-h urinary Na excretion in newly diagnosed essential
hypertensive patients.