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Adverse Effects of Aldosterone: Beyond Blood Pressure

Jenifer M. Brown

2024Journal of the American Heart Association42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Aldosterone is a steroid hormone that primarily acts through activation of the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR), a nuclear receptor responsible for downstream genomic regulation. Classically, activation of the MR in the renal tubular epithelium is responsible for sodium retention and volume expansion, raising systemic blood pressure. However, activation of the MR across a wide distribution of tissue types has been implicated in multiple adverse consequences for cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, renal, and metabolic disease, independent of blood pressure alone. Primary aldosteronism, heart failure, and chronic kidney disease are states of excessive aldosterone production and MR activity where targeting MR activation has had clinical benefits out of proportion to blood pressure lowering. The growing list of established and emerging therapies that target aldosterone and MR activation may provide new opportunities to improve clinical outcomes and enhance cardiovascular and renal health.

Topics & Concepts

Primary aldosteronismMineralocorticoid receptorAldosteroneBlood pressureMedicineMineralocorticoidInternal medicineEndocrinologyKidneyKidney diseaseHormoneAdverse effectCardiologyHormonal Regulation and HypertensionAdrenal and Paraganglionic TumorsAdrenal Hormones and Disorders
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