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Submitted on January 21, 2005
From the Department of Internal Medicine (D.C.K., D.F.L., X.Y.), Cardiac Arrhythmia Research Institute (D.C.K., X.Y.), and Department of Pediatrics (J.W., D.H.) and Pediatric Urology (D.H.), University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and the VA Medical Center, Oklahoma City, Ok. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: david-kem{at}ouhsc.edu.
Abstract--We have identified 2 relatively young patients with significant hypertension, an elongated single aberrant renal artery supplying blood to a renal segment, and evidence for localization of the elevated plasma renin activity to the side and vein draining the affected kidney. Furosemide-induced diuresis and acute oral captopril stimulated the renal vein/contralateral renin ratios to 4.3:1 and 6.5:1 in patients 1 and 2, respectively. These renal vein ratios are significantly higher than normal (>3:1 under similar conditions). Partial resection of the portion of the kidney affected by the aberrant tortuous artery led to a marked reduction in blood pressure in patient 1. Patient 2, not an operative candidate, responded satisfactorily to use of a converting enzyme inhibitor, which helped to confirm the dependency of the blood pressure on the abnormal flow relationship existing within that aberrant artery and the kidney. We believe these 2 patients are representative of a small but distinct subgroup within the larger number of patients with elongated single or multiple renal aberrant arteries. Each aberrant artery had no focal stenosis, although a decrease in flow relative to the tissue perfusion demands was apparent from the marked activation of the renin-angiotensin system in the venous system draining that artery. The increased length of such vessels may contribute to their decreased flow, although their average diameter may reside just above such a critical value for a normal length vessel. This new syndrome, involving more than one component of the flow/resistance relationship, has been overlooked when renin-dependent forms of hypertension are considered.
Revised on February 11, 2005
Renin-Dependent Hypertension Caused by Nonfocal Stenotic Aberrant Renal Arteries. Proof of a New Syndrome
David C. Kem*;
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K. D.C., L. D.F., W. J., H. D., Y. X, T. J., B. K., S. M., D. P., L. R., et al. Accessory Renal Arteries--Mostly, But Not Always, Innocuous: Renin-Dependent Hypertension Caused by Nonfocal Stenotic Aberrant Renal Arteries--Proof of a New Syndrome. Hypertension 46: 380-385, 2005 J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., January 1, 2006; 17(1): 3 - 11. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. H. Weinberger Long Renal Arteries: Too Much of a Good Thing? Hypertension, August 1, 2005; 46(2): 269 - 270. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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