Skin regulation of salt and blood pressure and potential clinical implications

Hypertens Res. 2023 Feb;46(2):408-416. doi: 10.1038/s41440-022-01096-8. Epub 2022 Nov 25.

Abstract

Sodium chloride, as salt, gives rise to hypertension. Nevertheless, individual susceptibility to the ramifications of sodium chloride is heterogeneous. The conventional nephron-centric regulation of sodium with neurohormonal inputs and responses is now expanded to include an intricate extrarenal pathway including the endothelium, skin, lymphatics, and immune cells. An overabundance of sodium is buffered and regulated by the skin interstitium. Excess sodium passes through (and damages) the vascular endothelium and can be dynamically stored in the skin, modulated by skin immune cells and lymphatics. This excess interstitially stored sodium is implicated in hypertension, cardiovascular dysfunction, metabolic disruption, and inflammatory dysregulation. This extrarenal pathway of regulating sodium represents a novel target for better blood pressure management, rebalancing disturbed inflammation, and hence addressing cardiovascular and metabolic disease.

Keywords: Hypertension; Kidney; Salt; Skin; Sodium.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Blood Pressure / physiology
  • Endothelium, Vascular
  • Humans
  • Hypertension*
  • Sodium / metabolism
  • Sodium Chloride*
  • Sodium Chloride, Dietary / adverse effects
  • Sodium Chloride, Dietary / metabolism

Substances

  • Sodium Chloride
  • Sodium Chloride, Dietary
  • Sodium