Effect of temperature on plasma renin samples.

1978 ◽  
Vol 24 (7) ◽  
pp. 1202-1204 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Fyhrquist ◽  
L Puutula

Abstract Plasma renin activity was measured in parallel in Na2EDTA-contained plasma samples after storage at -20, 4, and 24 degrees C, and in the lyophilized state. In peripheral venous plasma from 22 hypertensive patients, the activity (range, 0.08-46.7 microgram/liter per hour) remained stable during three days of storage at 4 degrees C, but decreased to a variable extent when plasma was kept at 24 degrees C: in one day by 9.2%, two days by 25.6%, and three days by 74.0%. Values were the same for samples handled at room temperature and chilled to 4 degrees C within 3 h and parallel samples immediately cooled in an icebath and kept at 4 degrees C. Freezing (-20 degrees C) and thawing of plasma was associated with a 22% mean increase in activity (range, 0-83%). Lyophilization resulted in a smaller increase of plasma renin activity (mean 12%, range 0-46%). Blood for renin analysis need not be cooled immediately, but must be cooled to 4 degrees C within 2-3 h. It then is stabe for at least three days. Freezing or lyophilization appears to be associated with some cold activation of "prorenin."

1978 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Fyhrquist ◽  
L Puutula

Abstract We applied a 1-h radioimmunoassay incubation at 37 degrees C in determining generated angiotensin I in an assay for plasma renin activity. Under these nonequilibrium conditions, 26% of the 125I-labeled angiotensin I was bound at zero dose of unlabeled angiotensin, as compared to 57% at equilibrium after 18 h at 4 degrees C. Sensitivity and useful range for the standard curve remained unchanged. Blanks were not altered. There was a good (r = .971) correlation between renin values in 120 plasma samples from hypertensive patients as measured with both procedures. With isoelectric focusing, we detected no damage to the labeled angiotensin I during incubation for 1 h at 37 degrees C in the presence of diluted plasma, disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetate, hydroxyquinoline, and neomycin. Analytical recovery of unlabeled angiotensin I added to the assay mixture was 98 +/- 2.3% (mean +/- SD). We conclude that our incubation conditions allow rapid and accurate assay of plasma renin activity to be completed in one working day.


1978 ◽  
Vol 24 (11) ◽  
pp. 2042-2043 ◽  
Author(s):  
R L Emanuel ◽  
G H Williams

Abstract Collecting blood on ice for renin determination reportedly may produce falsely high results. To assess the probability of this occurring under actual collection conditions, we measured renin activity in duplicate aliquots of plasma from blood samples from 25 hypertensive patients, both supine and upright, and in 10 supine normotensive controls. One aliquot of the blood was collected on ice and processed at 4 degrees C, the other at room temperature. The two aliquots showed no significant differences in renin activity. If anything, values for samples collected at room temperature were higher. Repeat determination on the same specimens stored at--20 degrees C for nine and 12 months revealed no significant changes in results for any samples, although the amount of angiotensin I found in the sample before incubation at 37 degrees C significantly increased. We conclude that it makes little difference at what temperature one collects blood for renin determination, but because of the wide fluctuations in "room" temperature we recommend that blood samples be collected on ice.


1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. van Royen ◽  
K. Hoekman ◽  
P. Elte ◽  
A. Schellekens

The CPA phenomenon occurs in about 20% of the population, 60% of women using contraceptive drugs and 90% of pregnant women. Cpa positive plasma samples show at 4°C spontaneous activation of prekallikrein and factor VII, shortening of the ThrombotestR Time (TT) and consumption of C4 esterase inhibitor. Since kalllkrein may activate prorenin, we related the CPA phenomenon to PRA.A highly significant correlation was found between the shortening of the TT at 4°C and an increase in PRA during storage of random plasma samples.It is concluded that special care should be taken when PRA is determined in CPA positive plasma samples in order to avoid erroneously high PRA levels.


Author(s):  
J. E. Roulston ◽  
G. A. Macgregor ◽  
Theresa Adam ◽  
Nirmala D. Markandu

Measurement of plasma renin activity is widely used as an indirect assessment of plasma angiotensin II concentration. There has been some controversy over the validity of this assay as an estimate of circulating angiotensin II levels because, during the in vitro generation of angiotensin I by renin, over a period of time, substrate concentration may diminish to such an extent that it becomes rate-limiting, giving an artificially low reflection of angiotensin II levels. In this paper the initial angiotensin I concentration, that is the concentration before in vitro angiotensin I generation, has been compared with the corresponding plasma renin activity for 2752 individual plasma samples. A linear relationship was found between the initial angiotensin I concentration and the plasma renin activity below 60 ng ml−1 h−1. This indicates that, under the conditions of this assay, substrate does not appear to become rate-limiting except at exceedingly high levels of plasma renin activity. These results appear to provide further validation for the use of plasma renin activity measurement as a reflection of the concentration of circulating angiotensin II levels.


1979 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1972-1974 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Rowe ◽  
E D Gallery ◽  
A Z Györy

Abstract Plasma renin activity increased by a mean of 7% from baseline values when blood from nonpregnant persons was kept at 0 degrees C for 5 h before incubation. Freezing chilled plasma and thawing it before incubation resulted in a mean increase of 11%. The same procedures used on plasma from normal pregnant women produced mean increases in plasma renin activity of 44 and 89%, respectively. If blood from pregnant women was kept at 0 degrees C for 5 h, and the plasma then separated, frozen, and thawed before incubation, the resulting mean increase in plasma renin activity from baseline values was 160%. We conclude that plasma from pregnant women should be handled at room temperature, or, if samples must be stored, they must be rapidly frozen, then thawed as rapidly as possible before incubation and assay if results are to be reproducible.


2009 ◽  
Vol 55 (5) ◽  
pp. 867-877 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duncan J Campbell ◽  
Juerg Nussberger ◽  
Michael Stowasser ◽  
A H Jan Danser ◽  
Alberto Morganti ◽  
...  

AbstractBackground: Measurement of plasma renin is important for the clinical assessment of hypertensive patients. The most common methods for measuring plasma renin are the plasma renin activity (PRA) assay and the renin immunoassay. The clinical application of renin inhibitor therapy has thrown into focus the differences in information provided by activity assays and immunoassays for renin and prorenin measurement and has drawn attention to the need for precautions to ensure their accurate measurement.Content: Renin activity assays and immunoassays provide related but different information. Whereas activity assays measure only active renin, immunoassays measure both active and inhibited renin. Particular care must be taken in the collection and processing of blood samples and in the performance of these assays to avoid errors in renin measurement. Both activity assays and immunoassays are susceptible to renin overestimation due to prorenin activation. In addition, activity assays performed with peptidase inhibitors may overestimate the degree of inhibition of PRA by renin inhibitor therapy. Moreover, immunoassays may overestimate the reactive increase in plasma renin concentration in response to renin inhibitor therapy, owing to the inhibitor promoting conversion of prorenin to an open conformation that is recognized by renin immunoassays.Conclusions: The successful application of renin assays to patient care requires that the clinician and the clinical chemist understand the information provided by these assays and of the precautions necessary to ensure their accuracy.


1978 ◽  
Vol 55 (s4) ◽  
pp. 301s-303s ◽  
Author(s):  
S. F. Wong ◽  
M. I. Mitchell ◽  
V. Robson ◽  
R. Wilkinson

1. Plasma renin activity, response to saralasin and exchangeable sodium have been measured in 43 patients with early renal disease. 2. Blood pressure was directly proportional to plasma renin activity. However, mean plasma renin activity was lower in patients with renal disease than in normal controls. 3. Blood pressure fell in response to saralasin infusion in proportion to the pre-infusion plasma renin activity. 4. Exchangeable sodium in hypertensive patients with renal disease did not exceed that in normotensive patients in contrast to earlier reports. Discrepancies may arise from the difficulty in interpreting measured exchangeable sodium in relation to body build.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document