High potassium intake increases the plasma concentration and urinary excretion of vasopressin in the rat

Experientia
D P BrooksAlberto Nasjletti

Abstract

The effect of alterations of dietary potassium intake on the plasma concentration and the urinary excretion of vasopressin was studied in male rats. Ingestion of a high potassium diet resulted in increases in the plasma concentrations of potassium and vasopressin, systolic blood pressure, urine flow, and urinary vasopressin excretion. Ingestion of a low potassium diet had little effect on the plasma vasopressin concentration and systolic blood pressure but caused decreases in the plasma potassium concentration and urinary vasopressin excretion. The results indicate that physiological changes in the plasma potassium concentration or some other consequence of altered dietary potassium intake can affect vasopressin release and excretion.

Citations

Apr 1, 1989·Journal of Pharmacological Methods·J A SchrieferA H Hassen
Dec 6, 2003·American Journal of Physiology. Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology·You TsuchiyaHironobu Morita
Nov 2, 1991·BMJ : British Medical Journal·J D Swales
Jan 8, 2016·American Journal of Physiology. Renal Physiology·Ryan J CorneliusSteven C Sansom
Mar 3, 2021·Experimental Physiology·Frederico FazanEduardo Colombari

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