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Aldosterone and Renin-Angiotensin System

March 30, 2025Chemical pathologyLab Tests

Table of Contents

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  • Aldosterone and Renin-Angiotensin
        • What sample is needed for Aldosterone?
        • What are the precautions for Aldosterone and Renin-Angiotensin?
        • What are the indications for renin-angiotensin and aldosterone?
        • How will you discuss the pathophysiology of renin-angiotensin and aldosterone?
  • Aldosterone
      • What are the Aldosterone functions?
        • How would you describe the renin-angiotensin system function?
        • What is the clinical significance of Aldosterone?
        • What is a normal Level of Aldosterone?
        • Another source
        • Source 2
        • Source 4
      • How would you discuss Primary Hyperaldosteronism?
        • What are the causes of primary Hyperadrenalism?
      • How would you discuss the secondary Hyperaldosteronism?
        • What are the causes of raised Aldosterone levels?
        • What are the causes of decreased Aldosterone levels?
        • What are the causes of decreased Aldosterone without hypertension?
        • What are the causes of decreased Aldosterone with hypertension?
        • What are the examples of clinical Aldosterone?
      • Questions and answers:

Aldosterone and Renin-Angiotensin

What sample is needed for Aldosterone?

  1. An aldosterone test can be done on plasma (heparin, EDTA, or citrate).
  2. The serum can also be used.
  3. Urine is collected for 24 hours with boric acid, and during collection, it is refrigerated.
  4. Two sample methods:
  5. The patient should rest and lie in a position for the first sample.
    1. The second sample can be taken when the patient is up and at least 4 hours after the first sample.
    2. The patient should be upright for at least 2 hours to collect the upright sample with unrestricted salt intake.
    3. Separate the serum/plasma immediately from the cells.
    4. The aldosterone peak is in the morning.
  6. 24 hours of urine can also be used to measure aldosterone.
    1. A urine sample is preferred to avoid the variation in aldosterone levels.
    2. The urine sample needs to be acidified with strong minerals or boric acid.
    3. Keep the urine refrigerated or on the ice for 24 hours immediately.
  7. The patient should be without any medication for 3 weeks.
  8.  The patient should be on a normal sodium diet for 2 to 4 weeks before the test.
  9. In the case of low K+, it should be treated before the test.
  10. The sample was labeled according to whether the patient was lying or standing.
  11. The AM level is higher than the PM level.

What are the precautions for Aldosterone and Renin-Angiotensin?

  1. The patient should be on a normal salt diet for at least 2 weeks before taking the sample.
  2. Diuretics, antihypertensive drugs, estrogen, and oral contraceptives should be terminated 2 to 4 hours before taking the sample.
  3. No radioactive material should be given.
  4. Transport the sample on ice and freeze it as soon as possible after collecting it.
  5. Stress and exercise can stimulate increased aldosterone production by stimulating the adrenal cortex.
  6. Thermal stress, starvation, and late pregnancy may increase the level.
  7. Values are affected by posture, diet, pregnancy, and diurnal variation.
    1. Values are increased by upright posture.
  8. Increased licorice intake can decrease the level of aldosterone. Stop taking it for at least two weeks before the sample is taken.
  9. Drugs like diazoxide, hydralazine, diuretics, nitroprusside, potassium, and laxatives increase the aldosterone level.
  10. Drugs like propranolol (Inderal) and captopril decrease the aldosterone level.
    1. Stop the propranolol one week before the sample is taken.
  11. Heparin therapy may decrease the level.
  12. Aldosterone level decreases with age.

What are the indications for renin-angiotensin and aldosterone?

  1. Used to diagnose hyperaldosteronism.
  2. It differentiates between primary aldosteronism (Adrenal diseases) and secondary aldosteronism (Extra-adrenal diseases).
    1. A single random aldosterone test is useless unless a plasma renin level test is done simultaneously.
  3. These are linked to regulate blood pressure.

How will you discuss the pathophysiology of renin-angiotensin and aldosterone?

Aldosterone

  1. Aldosterone is the adrenal gland hormone (produced in the zona glomerulosa of the adrenal cortex), and it helps to control electrolyte balance.
  2. Aldosterone is the major mineralocorticoid the adrenal cortex produces at 200 µg/day.
Adrenal glands hormone and their action

Adrenal glands hormone and their action

Aldosterone and adrenal gland hormones

Aldosterone and adrenal gland hormones

What are the Aldosterone functions?

  1. The main functions of aldosterone:
    1. It maintains mineral regulation by its action on the distal convoluted tubule to increase sodium and chloride resorption.
    2. Aldosterone responds to the change in body volume. It accelerates the reabsorption of the Na+ in the distle tubules in exchange for K+ ions.
    3. Na+ is retained, and K+ is excreted when there is an excess production of hormones.
    4. If the hormone is deficient, reverse action occurs, increasing Na+ excretion and retaining the K+ ions.
Aldosterone effect on kidneys

Aldosterone effect on kidneys

  1. Aldosterone is secreted at a rate of 150 to 200 micrograms/day, regulating salt content and extracellular fluid levels.
  2. Profuse sweating, which leads to the loss of NaCl and the need to conserve the Na+, is caused by the aldosterone hormone.
  3. Its action is on the renal distal convoluted tubule.
    1. It regulates sodium, chloride, and water resorption in exchange for potassium excretion and hydrogen in the kidneys.
Aldosterone and role of kidneys

Aldosterone and the role of kidneys

  1. Aldosterone helps maintain blood pressure and blood volume.
Aldosterone role for BP and electrolytes

Aldosterone’s role in Blood Pressure and electrolytes

How would you describe the renin-angiotensin system function?

  1. It controls the secretion of aldosterone.
  2. Renin is a proteolytic enzyme synthesized and stored in the juxtaglomerular cells located in the terminal part of afferent arterioles.
  3. The renin-angiotensin system regulates aldosterone secretion.
  4. The second controller is ACTH, which stimulates the production of Aldosterone. It depends upon the following:
    1. Low serum sodium level.
    2. High serum potassium level.
Renin and aldosterone system

Renin and aldosterone system

Aldosterone-renin angiotensin system

Aldosterone-renin angiotensin system

Aldosterone-angiotensin-renin cycle

Aldosterone-angiotensin-renin cycle

  1. The production of angiotensin stimulates the secretion and synthesis of Aldosterone from the adrenal gland.
  2. Potassium controls the secretion of aldosterone.
  3. High level of potassium:
    1. Increases the secretion of Aldosterone.
    2. While low level decreases production.
  4. Low level of Sodium:
    1. It causes the release of Renin, which stimulates aldosterone secretion again.
  5. Aldosterone level has a diurnal variation:
    1. With a peak early in the morning.
    2. Lower level late in the afternoon.

What is the clinical significance of Aldosterone?

  1. Hyperaldosteronism is usually seen in the adenoma of the adrenal cortex (Conn’s syndrome) or bilateral adrenal nodular hyperplasia.
  2. An excessive aldosterone level leads to the retention of sodium and potassium excretion.
    1. These are hypertension and hypokalemia.
    2. There are weaknesses and polyuria.
Adrenal gland aldosterone hormone function

Adrenal gland aldosterone hormone function

What is a normal Level of Aldosterone?

Source 1

Adult ng/dL
Supine position 3 to 16
Upright 7 to 30
Infants and children
Infant 3 days 7 to 184
1 to 12 months 5 to 90
1 to 2 years  7 to 54
2 to 10 years
Supine 2 to 22
Upright 4 to 48
Urine level 24 hours <50 mcg/dL

Another source

  • Adult
  • Upright position sitting for 2 hours
    • Male = 6 to 22 ng/dL
    • Female = 5 to 30 ng/dL
  • Newborn = 5 to 60 ng/dL

Source 2

  • Adult
  • Supine = 3 to 10 ng/dL
  • Upright
    • Male = 6 to 22 ng/dL
    • Female = 5y to 30 ng/dL
  • Newborn = 5 to 60 ng/dL
    • 1 week to 1 year = 1 to 60 ng/dL
    • 3 to 5 years = 5 to 80 ng/dL
    • 7 to 11 years = 5 to 70 ng/dL
    • 11 to 15 years =5 to 50 ng/dL
  • Urine = 2 to 26 µg /24 hours

Source 4

  • Normal in an upright position
    • Adult = 7 to 30 ng/dL (0.19 to 0.83 nmol/L)
    • Adolescent = 4 to 48 ng/dL (0.11 to 1.33 nmol/L)
    • Children = 5 to 80 ng/dL (0.14 to 2.22 nmol/L)
    • Low-sodium diet = 3 to 5 times higher values

How would you discuss Primary Hyperaldosteronism?

  1. These patients’ signs and symptoms are:
    1. Primary hyperaldosteronism, also called Conn’s syndrome, results from an overproduction of aldosterone, usually by an adrenal cortex adenoma. Other causes are carcinoma and nodular hyperplasia.
    2. Hypertension.
    3. Muscular pains and cramps.
    4. Weakness.
    5. Tetany.
    6. Paralysis.
    7. Polyuria.
    8. Low Potassium level.

What are the causes of primary Hyperadrenalism?

  1.  70% of cases are due to aldosterone-producing tumor-like adrenal cortical adenoma in 54% to 90%.
    1.  CT scans can diagnose 75% of the cases (60% to 90%).
    2. They do adrenal vein catheterization in a few centers and get samples from both side veins. If there is a significant difference between both sides, suggest adenoma.
  2.  30% of cases are caused by idiopathic bilateral adrenal hyperplasia; the range is 10% to 45%.
  3. Adrenal carcinoma is seen in <5% of the cases.
  4. Ectopic aldosterone production by the adrenal gland is embryologic rest within kidneys or, rarely, ovaries.
  5. Ectopic production of the ACTH or aldosterone by nonadrenal tumors.
  6. What are the lab findings on primary hyperaldosteronism?
    1. Decreased serum K+.
    2. Increased aldosterone production can not be suppressed by increasing the volume of Na+ intake.
      1. There is a diurnal variation of aldosterone, with lower values in the afternoon than in the morning.
      2. Also, there is an increased level in the upright position.
    3. There is suppressed plasma renin activity. This is a characteristic lab finding.
    4. The urinary secretion of aldosterone is increased. Urine estimation has the advantage of eliminating fluctuation.
  7. Primary hyperaldosteronism depends on three criteria:
    1. Hypertension without edema.
    2. Low plasma renin level that fails to increase with volume depletion.
    3. Increased aldosterone that fails to decrease with saline or angiotensin inhibition.
    4. Aldosterone stimulation test.
    5. Restrict the salt, and the Renin level will show little or no rise.
  8. Aldosterone suppression test.
    1. Give normal saline 1.5 to 2 L between 8 AM and 10 AM. Aldosterone will not be suppressed.
    2. A single random aldosterone test is of no diagnostic value unless plasma renin activity is done simultaneously.

How would you discuss the secondary Hyperaldosteronism?

  1. Usually associated with extra-adrenal stimulation or non-adrenal causes. e.g.
    1. Renal vascular stenosis or occlusion.
    2. Hypovolemia.
    3. Hyponatremia from diuretics or laxatives or low salt intake.
    4. Malignant hypertension.
    5. In case of pregnancy or use of estrogens.
    6. Edematous diseases like congestive heart failure, nephrotic syndrome, or cirrhosis.
    7. Potassium loading.

What are the causes of raised Aldosterone levels?

  1. In adrenocortical adenoma or carcinoma.
  2. Bilateral hyperplasia of the adrenal gland.
  3. Liver diseases.
  4. Congestive heart failure (CHF).
  5. Cirrhosis.
  6. Pregnancy.
  7. Nephrotic syndrome.
  8. Renovascular hypertension.

What are the values of aldosterone and renin in various diseases?

Causes of the aldosteronism Aldosterone level Renin level
  • Primary hyperaldosteronism
  • Increased
  • Decreased
  • Cushing’s syndrome
  • Decreased to normal
  • Decreased
  • Ingestion of licorice
  • Decreased
  • Decreased
  • High salt diet
  • Decreased
  • Decreased
  • Cirrhosis
  • Increased
  • Increased
  • Malignant hypertension
  • Increased
  • Increased
  • Pregnancy
  • Increased
  • Increased
  • Low salt diet
  • Increased
  • Increased
  • Addison disease
  • Decreased
  • Increased
  • Hypokalemia
  • Decreased
  • Increased

What are the causes of decreased Aldosterone levels?

  1. In primary hyperaldosteronism.
  2. Salt-losing diseases.
  3. Toxemia of pregnancy.

What are the causes of decreased Aldosterone without hypertension?

  1. Addison’s Disease.
  2. Syndrome of hyperaldosteronism due to renin deficiency.
  3. Isolated cases of aldosterone deficiency.

What are the causes of decreased Aldosterone with hypertension?

  1. Excessive secretion of corticosterone.
  2. Excessive secretion of Deoxycorticosterone.
  3. Excessive secretion of 18-hydroxy desoxycorticosterone.
  4. Turner’s syndrome (in some cases).
  5. Diabetes mellitus.
  6. Acute alcoholic intoxication.

What are the examples of clinical Aldosterone?

Clinical condition Aldosterone Potassium Blood pressure Renin activity
  • Primary hyperadrenalism
  • Increased
  • Low
  • High
  • Decreased
  • Primary hypoadrenalism
  • Decreased
  • High
  • Low
  • Increased
  • Secondary hyperadrenalism
  • Increased
  • Low or low normal
  • Usually high
  • Increased

How will you summarize the Aldosterone + renin-angiotensin system?

Summary of Aldosterone-renin angiotensin system

Summary of Aldosterone-renin angiotensin system

Questions and answers:

Question 1: What is the function of renin-angiotensin system?
Show answer
Renin-angiotensin system regulate aldosterone secretion.
Question 2: Where is the location of the juxtaglomerular apparatus?
Show answer
The Juxtaglomerular apparatus is located around the afferent arterioles.

Possible References Used
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