Publication | Open Access
Hypertension after renal transplantation.
117
Citations
8
References
1976
Year
HypertensionSurgeryRenal TransplantationBlood PressureRenal FunctionYears HypertensionChronic Kidney DiseaseEndocrine HypertensionTransplantation SurgeryTransplantationKidney TransplantKidney FailureAntihypertensive TherapyUrologyRenal DiseaseSteroid DosageCardiovascular DiseaseKidney TransplantationTransplant SurgeryMedicineNephrology
The incidence of hypertension (mean diastolic pressure above 90 mm Hg) was evaluated in 85 patients with renal transplants whose follow-up ranged from 3 to 84 months. Bilateral nephrectomy had been performed in 80 recipients. The proportion of hypertensive subjects rose during the first three months, subsequently stabilised around 50-60% for up to five years, and then decreased slightly during the next two years. Over the years hypertension fluctuated so that one-third of the initially hypertensive patients became normotensive, and over one-third of the initially normotensive patients became hypertensive. The main single aetiological factor was renal failure. A significant relation between steroid dosage and blood pressure was found in only a quarter of the hypertensive patients, and in another quarter no cause could be found.
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