Background: The breakdown of blood pressure and body fluid homeostasis observed in heart transplant (Htx) recipients may partly be due, as in heart failure, to a blunted renal response to elevated atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP).
Method: This possibility was addressed through determination of the relationship between ANP, the urinary cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), a biologic marker of ANP renal activity, and the early renal responses to 10 mL/kg isotonic saline infusion over 30 minutes in 8 control subjects and 8 matched Htx recipients.
Results: Urine flow, natriuresis, and urinary cGMP excretion increased similarly in both groups, resulting in elimination of, respectively, 1/2 and 2/3 of the sodium and the water load during the experiment that lasted 4 hours and 30 minutes. Plasma renin and aldosterone decreases were similar in both groups. Elevated ANP further increased in Htx after saline infusion (from 19.5 +/- 3.7 to 33.8 +/- 5.6 pmol/L, P < .001). Plasma cGMP paralleled ANP in both groups (r = 0.81; P < .001). Significant correlations were observed between plasma ANP and urinary cGMP excretion (r = 0.48, P < .025 and r = 0.43, P < .05 in Htx recipients and control subjects) and between plasma ANP and urinary sodium excretion (r = 0.64, P < .001 in Htx recipients).
Conclusion: In spite of a relative renal hyporesponsiveness to the cardiac hormone, with higher plasma ANP being not associated with increased renal excretions in Htx recipients, ANP is likely to participate in the appropriate short-term renal response to acute volume expansion in Htx recipients.