Cases reported "Hypertension, Renal"

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1/29. Solitary renal cyst, hypertension and renin.

    Solitary renal cysts may cause renin hypersecretion with associated hypertension by compressing surrounding tissue and by distortion of renal vessels. Selective measurements of plasma renin activity in the renal veins can predict the antihypertensive effect of decompression. An illustrative case is presented and its significance is discussed.
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2/29. effect of kidney resection on blood pressure and plasma renin activity. Case report and clinical study.

    Acute transient hypertension following kidney trauma occurred in a 17-year-old youth due to increased activity of the renin/angiotensin system. The systemic blood pressure and plasma renin activity was also studied following elective kidney resection. In one group of patients the operation was performed with clamping of the renal vessels; in the other no clamping was performed. Only minimal changes in blood pressure and plasma renin activity was found in both groups.
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3/29. role of lipids in the progression of renal disease in systemic lupus erythematosus patients.

    Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune connective tissue disease marked by immune-complex mediated lesions in small blood vessels of various organs, especially the kidneys, although other factors may also be implicated in the pathogenesis of the disease. This article focuses on the role of lipids in the progression of glomerular, vascular and tubulo-interstitial lesions in two patients with lupus nephritis associated with pronounced hyper- and dyslipidemia. The pathogenesis of progressive glomerulosclerosis in both patients appears to be multifactorial. In addition to immune complex mediated lupus glomerulonephritis, progressively active in the first patient, severe nephrotic-range persistent proteinuria, arterial hypertension associated with hyperfiltration and hyperperfusion injuries and, to a minor extent, hyper- and dyslipidemia were observed. Immunological and non-immunological factors were shown to contribute to the development of tubulo-interstitial lesions. In both patients, in addition to local immune deposits, prominent tubulo-interstitial lipid deposits were probably causally related to both hyperlipidemia and the increased permeability of the glomerular filtration barrier. Tubular lesions were highlighted by intracytoplasmic lipid droplets as well as small cleft-like spaces found to be impacted in the tubular lumina. They were seen to penetrate tubular epithelial cells and eventually lodge in the interstitium, surrounded by mononuclear cell infiltrates and foam cells. In both patients, hypertensive angiopathy and extraglomerular vascular immune deposits were demonstrated. In addition, in the second patient, arteriolar and small arterial hyaline was found at the age of 28 years to be full of lipids and calcium precipitates, suggesting a peripheral atherosclerosis-like process which never occurs as a natural age-related condition. In conclusion, all parts of the nephron may be involved in the pathogenetic process causally related or influenced by hyper- or dyslipidemia. Associated either with endothelial cell injury and consequent insudation of lipids in the vascular walls, glomerular filtration barrier injury with hyperfiltration, or tubulo-interstitial lipid deposition, the mechanism of tissue damage by lipids in all parts of the nephron shares similarities with the pathogenesis of systemic atherosclerosis.
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4/29. Unusual case of refractory hypertension: late presentation of the mid-aortic syndrome.

    A 58 year old patient with refractory hypertension, chronic renal failure, and widespread arterial bruits is described. Investigations found hypoplasia of the major blood vessels, particularly the aorta, leading to low flow nephropathy.
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5/29. pheochromocytoma with renal artery stenosis and high plasma renin activity.

    An unusual case of pheochromocytoma is described in this communication. Besides a chain of typical clinical pictures and laboratory findings which suggested a catecholamine-producing tumor, the left renal artery stenosis was demonstrated by an aortography and the plasma renin activity was consistently elevated. Surgery revealed the left renal artery was embedded in the tumor mass, originated from the left adrenal gland, resulting in a high degree of constricture of the vessel. Following the removal of the tumor, blood pressure immediately returned to normal, however, plasma renin activity remained elevated as long as 9 months of the follow-up study. The second aortography performed 14 months after the operation failed to demonstrate the left renal artery stenosis and subsequent studies revealed that plasma renin activity was gradually declining to upper normal levels. It is suggested that an excess of catecholamines secreted by the tumor was responsible for hypertension in this case, and that another factor, probably renal artery stenosis, was involved in the elevation of plasma renin activity, although this high renin activity was maintained for more than 9 months following the tumor extirpation.
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6/29. The role of partial nephrectomy in the treatment of pediatric renal hypertension.

    PURPOSE: From 5% to 25% of hypertension in children is renovascular compared with only 1% in adults. Although much attention is given to renovascular disease involving the main renal arteries, renin producing renal disease may also be intrarenal, involving abnormalities of the segmental vessels or renal parenchyma. We present our results of partial nephrectomy in this unique group of pediatric patients with hypertension in whom renin dependent hypertension involved only a segment of the kidney. MATERIALS AND methods: Six patients 10 months to 16 years old were referred for the evaluation of hypertension. Initial evaluations included computerized tomography, ultrasound, voiding cystourethrography and radionuclide renal scan. Renal arteriography with renal vein renin sampling was performed in 5 patients, of whom 4 underwent selective segmental renal vein sampling. Diagnoses included segmental hypoplasia (Ask-Upmark kidney), reflux associated scarring and renal arteriovenous malformation. RESULTS: In patients who underwent selective segmental renal vein sampling an increased renin level was present in the area of the renal lesion (mean 24.9 ng./ml. per hour, range 9.2 to 40.6) compared to the ipsilateral renal vein (15.6, 114 to 29.8). Three patients had evidence of contralateral suppression of renin secretion. All 6 patients underwent upper, lower or mid segment partial nephrectomy. All patients became immediately normotensive and remained so at a mean 10 years of followup. CONCLUSIONS: Partial nephrectomy provides an excellent nephron sparing cure for segmental renal hypertension. In the pediatric population selective segmental renal vein renin sampling is invaluable for locating the renin producing lesion. As in adults, contralateral renin suppression is predictive of surgical cure.
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7/29. Arterial hypertension with brachydactyly in a 15-year-old boy.

    Autosomal dominant brachydactyly with hypertension is the only form of monogenic hypertension which is not sodium dependent. The disease is characterized by brachydactyly type E, short stature, arterial hypertension and aberrant loop of posterior inferior cerebellar artery (pica) causing neurovascular conflict. So far the syndrome was described in one family in turkey and two in canada. We report a case of a 15-year-old boy who was admitted because of arterial hypertension 160/100 mmHg. He complained also of attacks of bilateral numbness of hands with deterioration of visual field. Examination revealed short stature (156 cm) and bone deformities of hands and feet consistent with brachydactyly type E. ophthalmoscopy showed mild narrowing of retinal arteries. Serum electrolytes, blood gases, and renal function were normal. renin activity and aldosterone concentrations were raised, and 24-h urinary excretion of catecholamines and urinary steroid profile were in normal range. Renal Doppler ultrasound was normal, but renal scintigraphy suggested vascular changes in the left kidney. Echocardiographic examination, besides mild left ventricular hypertrophy, was normal. magnetic resonance angiography (angio-MR) revealed bilateral abnormal pica loops and neurovascular conflict. Spiral angiotomography of renal arteries revealed narrow additional left renal artery. Both nonconsanguineous parents and younger brother were healthy, with normal height, without bone deformities, and had normal intracranial vessels. amlodipine and metoprolol were given, and blood pressure lowered to 143/87. Adding rilmenidine gave no effect and enalapril was then added. It led to further improvement in blood pressure control. To our knowledge, this is the first pediatric description of a sporadic form of autosomal dominant brachydactyly with hypertension with abnormalities of brain and renal arteries.
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8/29. radial artery as conduit for distal renal artery reconstruction.

    Reconstruction of the renal artery with both saphenous vein and prosthetic material as bypass graft is durable in atherosclerotic disease. Extensive experience with saphenous vein grafts in pediatric patients and patients without atherosclerosis reveals a disturbing incidence of vein graft aneurysm degeneration. Distal renal artery reconstruction involving small branch vessels is generally not amenable to prosthetic reconstruction. We report a new approach to distal renal artery bypass grafting to avert these limitations. CASE: A 43-year-old man with previously normal blood pressure had malignant hypertension, which proved difficult to control despite use of a beta-blocker and an angiotensin ii inhibitor. At renal angiography a fusiform aneurysm was revealed in a posterior branch of the right renal artery. The renal artery aneurysm was resected, and the left radial artery was harvested and used as a sequential aortorenal bypass graft to the two branch renal arteries. The postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient now has normal blood pressure with a calcium channel blocker for maintenance of the radial artery graft. Pathologic analysis revealed a pseudoaneurysm with dissection between the media and external lamella, consistent with fibromuscular dysplasia. CONCLUSION: Autologous artery is the preferred conduit for renal reconstruction in the pediatric population. On the basis of cardiac surgery experience, we used the radial artery and found it to be a technically satisfactory conduit for distal renal reconstruction in a patient without atherosclerosis.
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9/29. Immunologic considerations in renovascular hypertension.

    For decases certain diseases, such as glomerulonephritis, polyarteritis nodosa, scleroderma and serum sickness, have been linked with autoimmune pathogenesis. During recent years a host of additional diseases traditionally thought to have some genetic predisposition but with obscure etiology have been suspected of being autoimmune in nature. Rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, myasthenia gravis and thyroiditis are diseases of widely divergent organ systems, yet may well have common pathways of pathology via immune complexing mechanisms. Herein we present evidence supporting the concept that renal artery stenosis (occurring primarily in association with the middle aortic syndrome or after renal transplantation) is of immune etiology. Although the specific antigenic agent is still to be defined there is growing acceptance of the theory that medium and large vessels are subject to autoimmune vasculitis in many aspects similar to the autoimmune affections of small vessels. Several cases are presented. Some of these suggest an immune reaction by the natural history but without evidence of immunochemical reactants in the involved vessels, presumably because active disease was arrested at the time to study. In other cases immunofluorescent preparations demonstrate reactants in the walls of the vessels to document the hypothesis more convincingly.
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10/29. Erosion of embolization coils and guidewires from the kidney to the colon: delayed complication from coil and guidewire occlusion of renal arteriovenous malformation.

    Percutaneous transarterial embolization is a useful, nondrastic, valuable, and commonly used therapeutic option for the treatment of renal arteriovenous malformation (AVM). Compared with partial or total nephrectomy, transarterial embolization is more conservative and preserves renal function. However, it has some limitations and complications that could cause renal infarction and progression of hypertension, renal insufficiency, and pulmonary embolism. Large-sized AVM and multiplicity of abnormal vessels also limit the use of the embolization technique. The authors experienced erosion of the coils and guidewires that were used for embolization of renal AVM from kidney to descending colon. Coil embolization is practiced extensively, but a complication such as this does not appear to have been described.
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