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Blood Pressure Elevation during the Night in Chronic Renal Failure, Hemodialysis and after Renal Transplantation
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1991
Year
HypertensionBlood Pressure VariabilityDialysis TherapyRenal TransplantationBlood PressureRenal FunctionChronic Renal FailureChronic Kidney DiseaseBlood Pressure ElevationBlood Pressure MonitoringTransplantation SurgeryHemodialysisSleepControl GroupsKidney TransplantKidney FailureAmbulatory 24-Hour MonitoringEnd-stage Renal DiseaseUrologyKidney TransplantationChronic HemodialysisMedicineNephrologyAnesthesiology
Diurnal blood pressure variation was studied by ambulatory 24-hour monitoring in patients with advanced chronic renal failure (n = 20), on chronic hemodialysis (n = 20), after renal transplantation (n = 21) and in matched control groups without renal disease. Nocturnal blood pressure reductions were significantly blunted in all patient groups as compared with the respective control groups. In almost none of the 61 controls did the mean values during nighttime (8 p.m.-8 a.m.) exceed the mean day time values (8 a.m.-8 p.m.). In 10 of the 61 renal patients blood pressure was higher during the night. In patients with chronic renal disease nocturnal blood pressure elevation may be diagnosed by ambulatory 24-hour monitoring. This may require adaptation of antihypertensive treatment.