血漿レニン活性 PRA
WordNet
- (physical chemistry) a fourth state of matter distinct from solid or liquid or gas and present in stars and fusion reactors; a gas becomes a plasma when it is heated until the atoms lose all their electrons, leaving a highly electrified collection of nuclei and free electrons; "particles in space exist in the form of a plasma"
- a green slightly translucent variety of chalcedony used as a gemstone
- the colorless watery fluid of the blood and lymph that contains no cells, but in which the blood cells (erythrocytes, leukocytes, and thrombocytes) are suspended (同)plasm, blood_plasma
- any specific behavior; "they avoided all recreational activity"
- (chemistry) the capacity of a substance to take part in a chemical reaction; "catalytic activity"
- a proteolytic enzyme secreted by the kidneys; catalyzes the formation of angiotensin and thus affects blood pressure
PrepTutorEJDIC
- (また『blood plasma』)血漿,リンパ漿 / 原形質
- 〈U〉『活動』,働き;活力 / 《しばしば複数形で》(種々の)『活動』,行事;(学生の)学内(外)活動,クラブ活動 / 〈U〉(商況・市場などの)活発,活気
Wikipedia preview
出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2014/09/17 15:52:05」(JST)
[Wiki en表示]
Plasma renin activity (PRA), also known as the renin (active) assay or random plasma renin, is a measure of the activity of the plasma enzyme renin, which plays a major role in the body's regulation of blood pressure, thirst, and urine output. PRA is sometimes measured, specially in case of certain diseases which present with hypertension or hypotension. PRA is also raised in certain tumors.[1] A PRA measurement may be compared to a plasma aldosterone concentration as an aldosterone-to-renin ratio.
Contents
- 1 Measurement and Values
- 1.1 Considerations for variation
- 1.2 Normal values
- 1.3 Results and explanations
- 2 References
- 3 Further reading
Measurement and Values
Measurement is done from a sample of venous blood using immunological measuring mechanisms like ELISA, RIA, etc. Often these are done by automated machines to minimize human error.
Considerations for variation
These values are quite variable in a normal person. Variation occur with the following:
- Salt intake
- Pregnancy
- Time of the day
- Body position (sitting, lying down)
- State of water intake and dehydration
- Use of anti-hypertensive drugs, estrogen-containing forms of hormonal contraception, anti-anginals drugs, etc. (basically, most drugs that are active on the heart, blood vessels and/or the kidneys.
- Certain diseases of the heart, kidneys, etc.
Normal values
Reference ranges for blood tests of plasma renin activity can be given both in mass and in international units (μIU/mL or equivalently mIU/L, improperly shown as μU/mL or U/L, confusing mcU/mL used where Greek μ not available), with the former being roughly convertible to the latter by multiplying with 11.2.[2] The following table gives the lower limit (2.5th percentile) and upper limit (97.5th percentile) for plasma renin activity by mass and MCU, with different values owing to various factors of variability of reference ranges:
Unit |
Lower limit |
Upper limit |
ng/(mL*hour) |
0.29,[3] 1.9[4] |
3.7[3][4] |
μIU/mL |
3.3,[2] 21[5] |
41[2][5] |
Results and explanations
Please go through the physiology of renin and the renin-angiotensin system to understand why the following occur.
Higher-than-normal levels may indicate:[6][7][8][9][10]
Disease |
Brief Description |
Addison's disease |
Kidneys trying to counter low aldosterone output. |
Cirrhosis of the liver |
Reduced breakdown of Angiotensin. |
Essential hypertension |
Just more of renin is being secreted by the kidneys. |
Hemorrhage (bleeding) |
Kidneys trying to raise falling blood pressure. |
Hypokalemia |
Kidneys trying to raise falling blood pressure due to reduced cardiac output. |
Malignant hypertension |
Excessive renin is being secreted by the kidneys. |
Renin-producing renal tumors |
Tumors can secrete substances like this. See tumor markers |
Renovascular hypertension |
Renal vascular damage leading to reduced JGA perfusion. |
Lower-than-normal levels may indicate:
Disease |
Brief Description |
ADH therapy |
Leads to water retention and thus raised blood pressure. |
Salt-retaining steroid therapy |
see above |
Salt-sensitive essential hypertension |
see above |
Primary Hyperaldosteronsim |
see above and direct inhibition of aldosteron on renin secretion |
References
- ^ Hamilton Regional Laboratory Medicine Program - Laboratory Reference Centre Manual. Renin Direct.
- ^ a b c New Assays for Aldosterone, Renin and Parathyroid Hormone University of Washington, Department of Laboratory Medicine. Retrieved Mars 2011
- ^ a b Converted from values in μIU/mL by dividing with a factor of 11.2 μIU/mL per ng/(mL*hour), as given in:
- New Assays for Aldosterone, Renin and Parathyroid Hormone University of
Washington, Department of Laboratory Medicine. Retrieved Mars 2011
- ^ a b Pratt, R.; Flynn, J.; Hobart, P.; Paul, M.; Dzau, V. (1988). "Different secretory pathways of renin from mouse cells transfected with the human renin gene". The Journal of Biological Chemistry 263 (7): 3137–3141. PMID 2893797. edit
- ^ a b Converted from values in ng/(mL*hour) by multiplying with a factor of 11.2 μIU/mL per ng/(mL*hour), as given in:
- New Assays for Aldosterone, Renin and Parathyroid Hormone University of
Washington, Department of Laboratory Medicine. Retrieved Mars 2011
- ^ Fujino T, Nakagawa N, Yuhki K, Hara A, Yamada T, Takayama K, Kuriyama S, Hosoki Y, Takahata O, Taniguchi T, Fukuzawa J, Hasebe N, Kikuchi K, Narumiya S and Ushikubi F. (2004) Decreased susceptibility to renovascular hypertension in mice lacking the prostaglandin I2 receptor IP. J. Clin. Invest. 114:805-812.
- ^ Human renin gene: structure and sequence analysis. 1984 Aug; PubMed Free text.
- ^ Cloning and sequence analysis of cDNA for human renin precursor. ; PubMed.
- ^ Pivotal role of the renin/prorenin receptor in angiotensin II production and cellular responses to renin. 2002 Jun; PubMed.
- ^ Different secretory pathways of renin from mouse cells transfected with the human renin gene. 1988 Mar 5; PubMed Free text.
Further reading
- MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia(Public Domain - copy left):[1].
- Brenner & Rector's The Kidney, 7th ed., Saunders, 2004. pp. 2118–2119.Full Text with MDConsult subscription.
- Endocrine system:
- hormones
- Peptide hormones
- Steroid hormones
|
|
Endocrine
glands |
Hypothalamic-
pituitary
|
Hypothalamus
|
- GnRH
- TRH
- Dopamine
- CRH
- GHRH/Somatostatin
- Melanin concentrating hormone
|
|
Posterior pituitary
|
|
|
Anterior pituitary
|
- α
- FSH
- FSHB
- LH
- LHB
- TSH
- TSHB
- CGA
- Prolactin
- POMC
- CLIP
- ACTH
- MSH
- Endorphins
- Lipotropin
- GH
|
|
|
Adrenal axis
|
Adrenal cortex:
|
- aldosterone
- cortisol
- DHEA
|
|
Adrenal medulla:
|
- epinephrine
- norepinephrine
|
|
|
Thyroid axis
|
Thyroid:
|
- thyroid hormone
- calcitonin
|
|
Parathyroid:
|
|
|
|
Gonadal axis
|
Testis::
|
|
|
Ovary:
|
- estradiol
- progesterone
- activin and inhibin
- relaxin (pregnancy)
|
|
Placenta:
|
- hCG
- HPL
- estrogen
- progesterone
|
|
|
Islet-Acinar
Axis
|
Pancreas:
|
- glucagon
- insulin
- amylin
- somatostatin
- pancreatic polypeptide
|
|
|
Pineal gland
|
|
|
|
Other
glands |
Thymus:
|
- Thymosins
- Thymosin α1
- Beta thymosins
- Thymopoietin
- Thymulin
|
|
Digestive system:
|
Stomach:
|
|
|
Duodenum:
|
- CCK
- Incretins
- secretin
- motilin
- VIP
|
|
Ileum:
|
- enteroglucagon
- peptide YY
|
|
Liver/other
|
- Insulin-like growth factor
|
|
|
Adipose tissue:
|
- leptin
- adiponectin
- resistin
|
|
Skeleton::
|
|
|
Kidney:
|
- JGA (renin)
- peritubular cells
- calcitriol
- prostaglandin
|
|
Heart:
|
|
|
|
|
|
noco (d)/cong/tumr, sysi/epon
|
proc, drug (A10/H1/H2/H3/H5)
|
|
|
|
Circulatory system: Arteries and veins (TA A12.0, TH H3.09.02, GA 6.543/GA 7.641)
|
|
Systemic circulation |
(Left heart) → Aorta → Arteries → Arterioles → Capillaries → Venules → Veins → Vena cava → (Right heart)
|
|
Pulmonary circulation |
(Right heart) → Pulmonary arteries → (Lungs) → Pulmonary vein → (Left heart)
|
|
Blood vessels |
- Tunica intima (Endothelium, Internal elastic lamina)
- Tunica media
- Tunica externa
- Vasa vasorum
- Vasa nervorum
- Rete mirabile
- Circulatory anastomosis
|
|
Arteries |
- Nutrient artery
- Arteriole
|
|
Capillaries |
- (Continuous, Fenestrated, Sinusoidal)
- Precapillary sphincter
- Precapillary resistance
|
|
Veins |
- Vena comitans
- Superficial vein
- Deep vein
- Emissary veins
- Venous plexus
- Venule
|
|
Lymphatic |
- Lymphatic vessel
- Lymph
- Lymph capillary
|
|
|
anat (a:h/u/t/a/l,v:h/u/t/a/l)/phys/devp/cell/prot
|
noco/syva/cong/lyvd/tumr, sysi/epon, injr
|
proc, drug (C2s+n/3/4/5/7/8/9)
|
|
|
|
Urinary system physiology: renal physiology and acid-base physiology
|
|
Filtration |
- Renal blood flow
- Ultrafiltration
- Countercurrent exchange
- Filtration fraction
|
|
Hormones affecting
filtration |
- Antidiuretic hormone (ADH)
- Aldosterone
- Atrial natriuretic peptide
|
|
Secretion /
clearance |
- Pharmacokinetics
- Clearance of medications
- Urine flow rate
|
|
Reabsorption |
- Solvent drag
- Na+
- Cl−
- urea
- glucose
- oligopeptides
- protein
|
|
Endocrine |
- Renin
- Erythropoietin (EPO)
- Calcitriol (Active vitamin D)
- Prostaglandins
|
|
Assessing
renal function/
measures of dialysis |
- Glomerular filtration rate
- Creatinine clearance
- Renal clearance ratio
- Urea reduction ratio
- Kt/V
- Standardized Kt/V
- Hemodialysis product
- PAH clearance (Effective renal plasma flow
- Extraction ratio)
|
|
Acid-base
physiology |
- Fluid balance
- Darrow Yannet diagram
Body water: Intracellular fluid/Cytosol
- Extracellular fluid
- (Interstitial fluid
- Plasma
- Transcellular fluid)
- Base excess
- Davenport diagram
- Anion gap
- Arterial blood gas
- Winter's formula
|
|
Buffering/
compensation |
- Bicarbonate buffering system
- Respiratory compensation
- Renal compensation
|
|
Other |
- Fractional sodium excretion
- BUN-to-creatinine ratio
- Tubuloglomerular feedback
- Natriuresis
- Urine
|
|
|
|
noco/acba/cong/tumr, sysi/epon, urte
|
proc/itvp, drug (G4B), blte, urte
|
|
|
|
UpToDate Contents
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English Journal
- β-Blocker withdrawal is preferable for accurate interpretation of the aldosterone-renin ratio in chronically treated hypertension.
- Browne GA1, Griffin TP1,2, O'Shea PM3, Dennedy MC1,2.
- Clinical endocrinology.Clin Endocrinol (Oxf).2016 Mar;84(3):325-31. doi: 10.1111/cen.12882. Epub 2015 Sep 22.
- OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the effects of β-adrenoreceptor antagonists (β-blockers) on the aldosterone-renin ratio (ARR) in the context of antihypertensive polypharmacy in chronic hypertension. To determine the optimal duration of β-blocker withdrawal required to normalize the ARR.DESIGN: A prospect
- PMID 26300226
- Neural Control of Blood Pressure in Chronic Intermittent Hypoxia.
- Shell B1, Faulk K1, Cunningham JT2.
- Current hypertension reports.Curr Hypertens Rep.2016 Mar;18(3):19. doi: 10.1007/s11906-016-0627-8.
- Sleep apnea (SA) is increasing in prevalence and is commonly comorbid with hypertension. Chronic intermittent hypoxia is used to model the arterial hypoxemia seen in SA, and through this paradigm, the mechanisms that underlie SA-induced hypertension are becoming clear. Cyclic hypoxic exposure during
- PMID 26838032
- Association Between Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Dominance Over the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System and Hypertension.
- Daimon M1, Kamba A1, Murakami H1, Takahashi K1, Otaka H1, Makita K1, Yanagimachi M1, Terui K1, Kageyama K1, Nigawara T1, Sawada K1, Takahashi I1, Nakaji S1.
- The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.J Clin Endocrinol Metab.2016 Mar;101(3):889-97. doi: 10.1210/jc.2015-3568. Epub 2016 Jan 5.
- CONTEXT: The hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the renin-angiotensin aldosterone system (RAAS) are well known to be associated with hypertension. However, the extent of the effects is not yet well elucidated in general conditions.OBJECTIVE: To separately determine the effect of the HPA a
- PMID 26731257
Japanese Journal
- 直接的レニン阻害薬の臨床 (内分泌) -- (臨床分野での進歩)
- 原発性アルドステロン症の診断手引き (内分泌) -- (臨床分野での進歩)
Related Links
- Plasma Renin Activity Definition Renin is an enzyme released by the kidney to help control the body's sodium-potassium balance, fluid volume, and blood pressure. Purpose Plasma renin activity (PRA), also called plasma renin ...
- A high ratio of serum aldosterone (SA) in ng/dL to plasma renin activity (PRA) in ng/mL per hour, is a positive screening test result, a finding that warrants further testing. A SA/PRA ratio > or =20 and SA > or =15 ng/dL indicates ...
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