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1.
Renovascular hypertension   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Renovascular hypertension is the most common cause of secondary hypertension. Interest in identifying patients with renal artery stenosis has been stimulated recently by advances in three areas. First, is the realization that not only can renal artery stenosis cause renovascular hypertension, but it can also lead to progressive renal failure (ischemic nephropathy) caused by progression of disease, usually atherosclerotic in nature. Second, advances in percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty and, especially, the recent use of renal stents has led to a less invasive management of these patients as compared with traditional renal revascularization. Finally, the development of newer less invasive diagnostic techniques, both for the identification of patients with renal artery stenosis and to follow patients with known renal artery stenosis, has simplified the diagnostic aspect of the disease.  相似文献   

2.
The natural history of atherosclerotic and fibrous renal artery disease   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
From 1969 to 1979, 169 patients with two or more renal angiograms for renovascular disease (85 atherosclerotic, 75 fibrous, 9 atherosclerotic and fibrous) were reviewed in an attempt to characterize progression of disease and to determine clinical markers of progression. Progression of renal artery atherosclerosis was observed in 37 patients (44 per cent); progression to complete occlusion was observed in 14 patients (16 per cent). In the 66 patients with medial fibroplasia, progression was observed in 22 patients (33 per cent). Serial serum creatinine measurements in conjunction with measurements of kidney size may be used as markers of progressive atherosclerotic renovascular disease. These clinical markers did not represent progressive disease for individuals with medial fibroplasia.  相似文献   

3.
Renovascular disease appears to be increasing in prevalence, particularly in older subjects with atherosclerotic disease elsewhere. Its clinical manifestations and presentation are changing because of rapid advances in medical therapy and other comorbid events. Although fibromuscular dysplasia and other diseases affecting the renal artery can produce the syndrome of renovascular hypertension, atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis is the most common clinical entity. It can produce a spectrum of manifestations, ranging from asymptomatic ("incidental"), identified during angiographic evaluation of other conditions, to progressive hypertension to accelerated cardiovascular disease with pulmonary edema and advanced renal failure. With the widespread application of drugs which block the renin-angiotensin system, including angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin antagonists, many cases of renovascular hypertension remain unsuspected and never produce adverse effects. Clinicians need to be alert to the potential for disease progression, with the potential for total renal artery occlusion and/or loss of viable renal tissue. Selection of patients for renal revascularization depends on individual balance of risks and benefits regarding the likely outcomes regarding both improvements in blood pressure control and preservation of renal function.  相似文献   

4.
Atherosclerotic renal artery disease represents a cause of which little is known but not a cause to be neglected for hypertension and renal insufficiency. Even though its occurrence remains badly defined, atherosclerotic renal artery disease is constantly on the rise due to the aging population, the never prevailing hypertension and diabetes mellitus. This review aims to give a clinical profile of patients presenting with atherosclerotic renal artery disease and to discuss, in the light of study results, which diagnostic evaluation should be used considering the sequence and the benefit and risk of each in order to initiate a personalized treatment. Patients affected by atherosclerotic renal artery disease are likely to have more complications and more extensive target-organ damage than patients without renal artery stenosis. The evolution of the atherosclerotic renal artery disease is in general slow and progressive. Nevertheless, certain clinical cases manifest themselves with the onset of acute renal failure bought upon by the administration of blockers of the rennin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, or by some other causes responsible for a sudden drop in renal plasma flow (e.g., thrombosis of the renal artery). The relationship between atherosclerotic renal artery disease and atherosclerosis is complex, and mediators implicated in the pathophysiology of renovascular disease may also contribute to the progression of cardiovascular damage. An early assumption of the atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis is warranted to determine the adapted treatment (i.e., medical treatment, revascularisation...) just as the assumption and the correction of the more general cardiovascular risk factors.  相似文献   

5.
From April 1979 to June 1985 percutaneous transluminal angioplasty was attempted in 68 patients at our clinic to treat renovascular hypertension and/or to preserve renal function. The etiology of renal artery disease was atherosclerosis in 55 patients, fibrous dysplasia in 6, renal transplant arterial stenosis in 5 and postoperative saphenous vein graft stenosis in 2. A successful clinical outcome, defined as a decrease in blood pressure and/or improvement in renal function, was achieved in 12 patients (26.1 per cent) with atherosclerotic renal artery disease, 3 (75 per cent) with fibrous dysplasia, 2 (100 per cent) with saphenous vein graft stenosis and all 5 with transplant renal arterial stenosis (100 per cent). Improved results were observed in patients with nonostial atherosclerotic lesions compared to ostial lesions. There were 23 complications (33.8 per cent) after percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and all but 1 occurred with atherosclerosis. Of these complications 13 (19 per cent) were considered major. Since the beginning of 1983, however, only 3 complications occurred among 32 procedures (9.4 per cent) and only 1 of these was of major significance. When technically feasible, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty can provide effective treatment for selected patients with renal artery stenosis.  相似文献   

6.
Atherosclerotic renal artery disease and the fibrous renal artery diseases are described with respect to their radiographic and clinical characteristics. In a retrospective review, serial renal arteriograms of 85 patients with atherosclerotic renal artery disease and 66 patients with the medial fibroplasia type of fibrous renal artery disease were analyzed to characterize their natural history. Atherosclerotic renovascular disease progressed in 37 patients (44%) with total arterial occlusion occurring in 14 patients (16%). Medial fibroplasia of the renal artery progressed in 22 patients (33%) with no patient progressing to complete occlusion. Reduction in kidney size and increase in serum creatinine were good clinical markers for progressive atherosclerotic renal artery disease, but failed to discriminate between progressive and nonprogressive medial fibroplasia. The adequacy of BP control did not correlate with progressive occlusive disease in patients with either renal artery atherosclerosis or medial fibroplasia. The clinical implications of these observations are discussed with a view toward renal revascularization or transluminal angioplasty for preservation of renal function.  相似文献   

7.
The technical expertise and tools required to treat renovascular obstruction have become commonplace, and many series of patients revascularized with surgery, balloon angioplasty or endovascular stenting have been reported. Nevertheless, although hypertension and renal failure are easy to diagnose, their cause often remains elusive. Evidence is developing that patients with hypertension and atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis may often have hypertension and renovascular disease but not hypertension because of renovascular disease. As a result, diagnosis and therapy are increasingly directed towards the preservation of renal function, and the future of renal revascularization will depend on how well potential therapies address this goal.  相似文献   

8.
From 1964 to 1977, 33 patients underwent aortorenal reimplantation as surgical treatment for renovascular hypertension. Over-all results were 13 patients cured (39 per cent), 15 patients improved (46 per cent), and there were 5 failures (15 per cent). The results were equally satisfactory in patients with atherosclerotic or fibrous renal artery disease. Postoperative arterial stenosis or occlusion occurred in 5 patients (15 per cent). Aortorenal reimplantation is an effective method of renal revascularization in properly selected patients, and long-term results are comparable with those of aortorenal bypass.  相似文献   

9.
Novel noninvasive techniques for studying renal function in man   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Renal artery stenosis is a major cause of renovascular hypertension in humans, and may lead to ischemic nephropathy and end-stage renal disease. The mechanisms responsible for the progressive renal functional and structural alterations have not been fully elucidated, partly because of the lack of reliable, noninvasive techniques capable of quantifying renal regional hemodynamics and function distal to a stenosis in the renal artery. Novel imaging tools now enable quantification of concurrent intrarenal (cortical and medullary) hemodynamics, segmental nephron dynamics (intratubular transit times and fluid concentrations), and renal function in the intact kidney. Fast computed tomography (CT) scanners, such as electron beam CT, allow discrimination of subtle alterations in renal perfusion and segmental nephron function consequent to changes in renal perfusion pressure, both within and below the range of renal blood flow autoregulation. This technique provides an opportunity to define intrarenal perfusion patterns and function in animals and patients with renal artery stenosis, and may provide insight into the effects of chronic unilateral or bilateral renovascular disease on both the hypoperfused and contralateral kidneys. This methodology may thereby prove to be very useful in the evaluation of renal disease in general, and the renovascular hypertensive patient in particular.  相似文献   

10.
Renal artery diseases are rare, but seen more often in the last years due to demographic changes and increasing non invasive diagnostics. There are different types of pathologies involving the renal arteries. The clinical manifestation is mostly hypertension or renovascular insufficiency. The main indication for endovascular therapy is hypertension, especially in young patients with fibromuscular stenosis and in elderly patients with progressive atherosclerotic stenosis with severe hypertension. The surgical therapy is left for complex reconstructions, for aneurysm resection and for simultaneous renal and aortic revascularizations in elderly patients with a high comorbidity. The indication for surgical therapy is mostly renovascular insufficiency or rather organ preservation. The different therapeutic procedures, endovascular or surgical, are demonstrated according to outcome, complications and evidence.  相似文献   

11.
Atherosclerotic renovascular disease is an increasingly recognized cause of severe hypertension and declining kidney function. Patients with atherosclerotic renovascular disease have been demonstrated to have an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular events. Over the course of the last two decades renal artery revascularization for treatment of atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (RAS) has gained great increase via percutaneous techniques. However the efficacy of contemporary revascularization therapies in the treatment of renal artery stenosis is unproven and controversial. The indication for renal artery stenting is widely questioned due to a not yet proven benefit of renal revascularization compared to best medical therapy. Many authors question the efficacy of percutaneous renal revascularization on clinical outcome parameters, such as preservation of renal function and blood pressure control. None of the so far published randomized controlled trials could prove a beneficial outcome of RAS revascularization compared with medical management. Currently accepted indications for revascularization are significant RAS with progressive or acute deterioration of renal function and/or severe uncontrollable hypertension, renal function decline with the use of agents blocking the renin-angiotensin system and recurrent flash pulmonary edema. The key point for success is the correct selection of the patient. This article summarizes the background and the limitations of the so far published and still ongoing controlled trials.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA) is a simple, efficient procedure with a low risk/benefit ratio when carried out by experienced interventional radiologists. The role of radiology in the diagnosis and treatment of renovascular hypertension (RVH) is discussed, with special attention to technique. PTRA and surgical results are dependent on the etiology and location of renal artery stenosis (RAS). At New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, PTRA is the procedure of choice in fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD), unilateral non-ostial atheroma, arteritis, renal transplantation, and pediatrics. The choice between surgery and PTRA in patients with bilateral and ostial atherosclerotic disease and/or azotemia depends on the surgical risk category of the patient. At our institution, coronary and cerebrovascular disease do not preclude PTRA.  相似文献   

13.
Ischemic nephropathy: where are we now?   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Identification and reversing the loss of kidney function beyond occlusive disease of the renal arteries poses a major clinical challenge. Recent studies indicate that atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis develops as a function of age and is commonly associated with other microvascular disease, including nephrosclerosis and diabetic nephropathy. The risks of renal artery stenosis are related both to declining kidney function and to accelerated cardiovascular disease, with increased morbidity and mortality. Newer drugs, including agents that block the renin-angiotensin system, have improved the level of BP control for renovascular hypertension. Progressive renovascular disease during medical therapy can produce refractory hypertension, congestive heart failure, and renal failure with tubulointerstitial fibrosis. Recent studies indicate a complex interplay of oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, and activation of fibrogenic cytokines as a result of experimental atherosclerosis and renal hypoperfusion. Advances in imaging and interventional devices offer major new opportunities to prevent progressive loss of kidney function. Recent series indicate that although 25 to 30% of patients with impaired renal function can recover glomerular filtration after revascularization, many have no apparent change in kidney function and 19 to 25% experience a significant loss of kidney function, in some cases as a result of atheroemboli. To select patients who are most likely to benefit from vascular intervention, clinicians should understand the pathophysiology of developing ischemic nephropathy and the potential hazards of revascularization in the setting of diffuse atherosclerotic disease. Further research should be directed toward identification of critical disease, regulation of fibrogenesis, and the interaction with other atherosclerotic processes.  相似文献   

14.
Summary As newer surgical techniques and concepts have emerged, including revascularization of the totally occluded renal artery and alternatives to aortorenal bypass (hepatic, splenic, or iliac artery to renal artery grafts), our patient population has changed dramatically. Patients with diffuse atherosclerotic disease, bilateral renal artery stenosis, totally occluded renal arteries, and azotemia are more commonly referred for renal revascularization, thereby changing the indications for operation and the results that can be anticipated. Although our results in patients undergoing surgery solely for uncontrollable hypertension or renal failure have been successful, much work needs to be done to improve the results obtained in patients with a combination of uncontrollable hypertension and renal failure.  相似文献   

15.
Renal artery stenosis is a consequence of generalized atherosclerosis and many specialists perform routine selective renal angiography to detect and treat renal artery stenosis. The incidence of clinically important renal artery stenosis is not well defined in patients with symptomatic peripheral arterial disease. The purpose of this study was to better delineate the incidence of and the risk factors associated with renal artery stenosis, renovascular hypertension, and ischemic nephropathy incidentally discovered during angiography for symptomatic peripheral arterial disease. Two hundred consecutive patients undergoing angiographic evaluation of symptomatic lower extremity peripheral arterial disease were studied retrospectively. Angiograms were reviewed for the presence of renal artery stenosis (defined as >or= 25% diameter reduction in either renal artery) and findings were then correlated to the clinical diagnosis of renovascular hypertension (> 50% renal artery stenosis and >or= 3-drug resistive hypertension) and ischemic nephropathy (defined as > 50% bilateral renal artery stenosis, 3-drug hypertension, and creatinine >or= 1.5). Angiographic findings were also correlated with risk factors to determine if a relationship correlated to the presence of and degree of renal artery stenosis. Data were analyzed using the Student's t test, Chi-square model, and multiple logistic regression analysis. The overall incidence of any degree of renal artery stenosis in this study population was 26% (52 patients). Only 24 (12%) patients had an incidental finding of >or= 50% stenosis in either renal artery. Six (3%) of these patients were found to have associated renovascular hypertension. Additionally, 9 (4.5%) patients had coexistent renal insufficiency and significant renal artery stenosis; five with end-stage renal disease on chronic hemodialysis. Only one patient with end-stage renal disease had poorly controlled 3-drug hypertension. Thus definitive ischemic nephropathy was present in only one (0.5%) patient. Statistically significant risk factors associated with the presence of renal artery stenosis include hypertension (P < .001), coronary disease (P = .024), female gender (P = .010), diabetes (P = .039), aorto-iliac disease (P = .031), multiple levels of peripheral arterial disease (P < .001), and age over 60 ( P < .001). While the incidence of renal artery stenosis in patients being evaluated for symptomatic peripheral arterial disease is similar to that reported in the cardiology literature, the incidence of renovascular hypertension and ischemic nephropathy is exceedingly low (3% and 0.5%, respectively)-findings similar to data reported in the general hypertensive population. These data suggest that incidental selective renal angiography is not justified in patients with symptomatic peripheral arterial disease.  相似文献   

16.
Atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (RAS) is the most common primary disease of the renal arteries and results in renovascular hypertension and ischemic nephropathy. Ischemic nephropathy from atherosclerotic RAS is increasingly recognized as a cause of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and in severe cases can lead to end-stage renal disease. The exact prevalence of atherosclerotic RAS is unknown because the disease is often asymptomatic and few are screened unless they have significant traditional cardiac risk factors or symptoms. A high prevalence of atherosclerotic RAS is seen in patients with advanced age, congestive heart failure, and extrarenal atherosclerosis. The primary reason for diagnosing ischemic nephropathy from renovascular disease is that the loss of kidney function is potentially reversible through treatment of the occlusion with surgical revascularization or percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty. However, the benefits of revascularization have to be considered in the context of other comorbid disease and remain controversial. There are several tests available for the screening and diagnosis of atherosclerotic RAS; however, the diagnostic test of choice should be based on patient factors and institutional expertise because the best test is the one performed most often at the individual medical facility.  相似文献   

17.
Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor-induced renal failure is now a well-recognized phenomenon that appears to occur almost exclusively in patients with a preexisting reduction in renal perfusion pressure, especially those with renovascular disease. In the latter group of patients, renal failure probably results from some combination of reduced poststenotic renal perfusion pressure and a unique disturbance in the autoregulation of glomerular filtration rate. Although traditionally regarded as functional and reversible, recent animal studies suggest that angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor-induced reductions of glomerular filtration rate may lead to progressive renal atrophy, an observation that raises concerns about the long-term safety of these agents in patients with renovascular disease. On the other hand, the deleterious consequences of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in renovascular disease have been exploited as aids in the diagnosis of this disorder. Whether the adjunctive use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors will prove to be useful in screening large populations of hypertensive patients for renovascular hypertension remains to be determined. However, such adjunctive tests appear to be useful in judging the functional significance of angiographically documented renal artery stenosis.  相似文献   

18.
Ischemic nephropathy/azotemic renovascular disease   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Atherosclerotic renal vascular disease can impair kidney perfusion and lead to deterioration of kidney function. The mechanisms by which reversible tissue injury becomes irreversible are not yet certain, although multiple pathways for activation of inflammatory cytokines and tissue fibrosis have been identified. The clinical hallmark of this disorder is loss of glomerular filtration beyond renal artery stenosis affecting the entire renal mass, usually associated with progressive hypertension and fluid retention. Some investigators believe that 12% to 18% of patients reaching end-stage renal disease in western countries may have lost kidney function because of azotemic renovascular disease. This is an important disorder to identify, because reduction of arterial pressure from antihypertensive therapy may further reduce kidney perfusion. Although administration of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin II antagonists lead to functional loss of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) beyond a stenotic lesion because of the removal of efferent actions of angiotensin II, other antihypertensive agents reduce renal perfusion also. Restoration of renal blood flow by surgical or endovascular methods can prevent progressive disease and sometimes improves renal function. However, clinical series commonly indicate that some patients lose further kidney function after revascularization. This may be explained partly by undetected renal atheremboli or other toxicity related to vascular repair. Hence, selection of patients for renal revascularization requires careful consideration of comorbid disease risk and the balance of risks and benefits regarding progressive renal disease. Searching for better methods of identifying those individuals at risk for irreversible loss of renal function and who might benefit from vascular repair is a high research priority.  相似文献   

19.
PURPOSE: At a time of minimally invasive surgery in urology, the role of surgical kidney revascularization in the management of renal artery disease has changed during the last decade. Our experience with surgical kidney revascularization, and the long-term clinical outcomes of fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) and atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis are reviewed. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study group comprised 140 patients with renovascular hypertension, 72 with FMD and 68 with atherosclerotic renal artery disease, who underwent surgical revascularization between 1982 and 1999. The indications for surgical revascularization were the treatment of hypertension and the preservation of renal function in 17 patients with renal artery occlusion, 55 with ostial stenosis, 52 with branch stenosis, 6 with bilateral artery stenosis, 7 with solitary kidney renal artery stenosis and 3 with solitary kidney renal artery occlusion. RESULTS: Postoperative blood pressure and renal function were monitored for 1 to 17 years (mean 11.3). Long-term blood pressure control was observed in 93% of patients with FMD and in 71% of those with atherosclerosis. Improvement or stabilization of renal function was observed in 92% of patients with FMD and in 68% of those with atherosclerosis. The preoperative estimated glomerular filtration rate compared to postoperative was significantly increased in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Surgical kidney revascularization is effective in secondary hypertension with a high long-term efficacy in the normalization of blood pressure and in the preservation of renal function, especially in patients with a solitary or 1 functional kidney.  相似文献   

20.
From January 1993 to May 1996, 108 patients (64 men, 44 women; mean age, 72 years; age range, 37 to 87 years) underwent 125 percutaneous transluminal angioplasties and stent implantations primarily for atherosclerotic lesions of the renal artery. Sixty-four patients underwent treatment for renovascular hypertension (two antihypertensive medications or more), 32 patients underwent treatment for a combination of hypertension and renal failure (serum creatinine level >/=1.6 mg/dL), and a small group of six patients (5%) without hypertension or diminished renal function underwent treatment to prevent the progression to renal artery occlusion and kidney loss. Thirty-three patients (31%) had renovascular hypertension that was classified as severe on three or more medications, 31 patients (29%) had renovascular hypertension that was classified as moderate on two medications, and 38 patients (35%) had renovascular hypertension that was classified in the mild group on a single antihypertensive agent. Stenotic lesions were located at the ostium of the renal artery in 82 cases (65%) and were ostial-adjacent (<5 mm from renal ostium) in the other 43 cases (34%). A total of 125 stents were deployed in 125 arteries (procedural success 97.6%). Renovascular hypertension either was cured or was improved in 73 patients (68%), with 14 patients (13%) considered cured (normotensive on no medications). The conditions of 29 patients (27%) were unchanged, and 6 patients (5%) had worsening hypertension after surgery. We were unable to demonstrate a statistically significant improvement in serum creatinine levels after renal artery balloon angioplasty/stenting. Complications occurred in a total of nine cases (7.2%), six of which were related to technical problems. One patient had worsening renal insufficiency caused by contrast agent, and another patient had a perinephric hematoma develop that necessitated evacuation. There were four postoperative deaths (30-day mortality). Two of these deaths were caused by postoperative myocardial infarction. The other two patients had progressive renal failure develop that necessitated dialysis. These patients later died of the disease process despite supportive care. Follow-up renal artery duplex scan studies and angiograms were available on 96 patients (76%). The mean peak systolic renal/aortic ratio on duplex scanning was 2.2. Life-table analysis yielded a 74% primary patency rate and an 85% secondary patency rate at 36 months. This retrospective analysis showed the effectiveness of combining percutaneous transluminal angioplasty with stent deployment for significant renal artery stenosis to treat renovascular hypertension.  相似文献   

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