Ambulatory blood pressure in patients with occult recurrent coarctation of the aorta |
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Authors: | M. D. Parrish E. Torres R. Peshock D. E. Fixler |
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Affiliation: | (1) Children's Medical Center, 1935 Motor Street, 75235 Dallas, TX, USA;(2) Present address: Department of Pediatrics, University of California, Davis Medical Center, 2516 Stockton Boulevard, 95817 Sacramento, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() The hypothesis that mild recurrent aortic obstruction produces subtle changes in ambulatory blood pressure was investigated by performing 24-hour monitoring on 11 postoperative coarctation patients. Patients (age 16.1±2.7 years) were compared with normal controls (age 15.7±2.5 years,n=15). Surgery (end-to-end anastomosis) was performed at 6.0±1.0 years of age. There were no significant differences between patients and controls in terms of baseline blood pressure (right arm 123/78±4/3 mmHg versus 120/75±3/2 mmHg) or right leg systolic pressure (125±6 mmHg versus 123±4 mmHg). Of the 11 patients 8 had recoarctation by Doppler study (mean gradient 25.3±2.1 mmHg), 5 of 11 had a postexercise arm-leg pressure difference of>30 mmHg, and 6 patients had aortic diameters at the site of surgery <70% of the descending aortic diameter (by magnetic resonance imaging). There were no significant differences between the coarctation and control groups in terms of mean ambulatory systolic (125±3 mmHg versus 119±2 mmHg) or diastolic (69±2 mmHg versus 72±2 mmHg) pressures throughout the day. However, coarctation patients had a larger number of systolic pressures that exceeded the 95th percentile (18.2±5.6% versus 6.8±1.2%). These labile increases in systolic pressure correlated with residual coarctation (r=0.642,p=0.003). Ambulatory monitoring is a useful tool for detecting and monitoring subtle abnormalities of blood pressure control after coarctation repair. |
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Keywords: | Ambulatory blood pressures Coarctation Hypertension |
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