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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (vascular disease)
17,070 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Renal artery stenosis is the most common cause of potentially remediable secondary hypertension. The most common causes include atherosclerosis and fibromuscular dysplasia. Particularly the atherosclerotic form is a progressive disease that may lead to gradual and silent loss of renal functional tissue. Thus, early diagnosis of renal artery stenosis is an important clinical objective since interventional therapy may improve or cure hypertension and preserve renal function. Screening for renal artery stenosis is indicated in the suspicion of renovascular hypertension or ischemic nephropathy in order to identify patients in which an endoluminal or a surgical revascularization is advisable. In the recent years many noninvasive tests have been proposed and evaluated in the clinical practice, in alternative to arteriography. These include nuclear scan, color Doppler sonography, CT angiography and MR angiography. Sonography is usually the first diagnostic modality for the non invasive evaluation of renal vascular disease with 95% sensitivity and 90% specificity when performed in dedicated laboratories. Despite sonography is highly affected by operator dependence, and it takes a lot of time to train good operators, actually is the best screening test because it is not expensive, non invasive and accurate. When a discrepancy exists between the clinical data and the results of US, other tests are mandatory.
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PMID:Duplex scan sonography of renal artery stenosis. 1286 75

Patients with end-stage renal disease have a high mortality, with the majority of deaths due to vascular disease. The prevalence of vascular risk factors and vascular disease in predialysis chronic renal failure (CRF) is poorly characterized. The aim of the present study was to determine the prevalence of vascular risk factors and clinically overt vascular disease in an Australian cohort of patients with predialysis CRF. We performed a retrospective chart review of outpatients with CRF and noted demographic data, the cause of renal failure, the presence or otherwise of vascular risk factors and vascular disease and calculated glomerular filtration rate. The prevalence of overt vascular disease and modifiable vascular risk factors was calculated. One hundred and eighty patients completed the study. Eighty-nine per cent of patients had hypertension, 68% had dyslipidaemia, 32% were diabetic and 38% were previous smokers. The subgroup with diabetic nephropathy had significantly more risk factors (P < 0.001) than other groups. Twenty-seven per cent of the group had cardiovascular disease, 22% had cerebrovascular disease, 23% had peripheral vascular disease and 9% had renal artery stenosis. Patients with ischaemic nephropathy had significantly more vascular disease than other groups (P < 0.001). Patients with overt vascular disease were older, had a higher number of risk factors and a higher calcium phosphate product than those without vascular disease. In conclusion, the present study suggests a high prevalence of vascular risk factors and vascular disease in predialysis CRF. Early detection provides an opportunity for early intervention and may help reduce the development of vascular disease, and the associated mortality, once these patients progress to dialysis.
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PMID:Prevalence of vascular risk factors and vascular disease in predialysis chronic renal failure. 1501 97

Atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (ARAS) is associated with two common clinical syndromes: renovascular hypertension and ischemic nephropathy, which often coexist. The ensuing renovascular disease constitutes the fastest-growing etiology of end-stage renal disease. Diagnostic work-up for hemodynamical significant renal artery stenosis should be restricted to patients suspected to be at moderate or high risk for renovascular disease. Patients at moderate risk should first undergo a screening test, like Doppler ultrasonography or captopril-enhanced scintigraphy. In case of a positive screening test, renal artery imaging with either spiral computed tomography angiography or magnetic resonance angiography with Gadolinium is indicated. Patients at high risk for renovascular disease may be directly referred for intra-arterial renal artery angiography, the golden standard diagnostic procedure. A renal artery stenosis with narrowing of > 50-60% of the lumen, is considered hemodynamically significant, and may be suitable for treatment with angioplasty or angioplasty plus stent placement (in case of osteal renal artery stenosis). The therapeutic approach of the hypertensive patient with a hemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis is currently a matter of great debate. In any case optimal medical therapy with antihypertensive, lipid-lowering, and platelet-inhibiting drugs should be instituted, since such approach may not only prevent the progression to end-stage renal disease, but may also prevent the progression of extra-renal vascular disease, which affects the majority of these patients. Current evidence suggests that angioplasty (with additional stent placement in case of osteal renal artery stenosis) may benefit a subset of patients with significant RAS, i.e. patients with a resistance index < 80% at the level of the segmental renal arteries, and patients with bilateral RAS or patients with unilateral RAS with a unique functioning kidney. Prospective, randomized and controlled studies with clearly defined clinical endpoints are needed to better define the absolute and relative indications of angioplasty (plus stenting) in the setting of renal artery stenosis.
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PMID:Renovascular hypertension: diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. 1505 32

Renal artery stenosis (RAS) is a common condition associated with hypertension and renal insufficiency. The high prevalence of RAS patients with coronary and lower extremity vascular disease has been well established. Fibromuscular dysplasia in young females and atherosclerosis in patients over the age of 55 are the most common causes. Poorly controlled hypertension refractory to medical therapy, worsening of renal function, and flash pulmonary edema may point to underlying RAS. Duplex ultrasonography and magnetic resonance angiography have largely replaced captopril scanning for RAS screening. However, renal angiography still remains the gold standard to diagnose RAS. Treatment options include medical therapy, angioplasty, and surgery. In general, patients with a stenosis greater than 50%, a translesional systolic pressure gradient greater than 15 mm Hg, and difficult-to-control hypertension and/or worsening renal insufficiency are candidates for renal revascularization. Percutaneous transluminal revascularization has evolved to become the preferred revascularization therapy because it is a less invasive and more cost-effective alternative to surgery and is associated with high technical success, as well as a low complication rate. The natural history of RAS is to progress over time, leading to renal artery occlusion, loss of renal mass, worsening of renal function, and, ultimately, end-stage renal disease. It is therefore important to aggressively screen, recognize, and treat the entity early in its course.
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PMID:Current advances in the diagnosis and treatment of renal artery stenosis. 1558 Jan 59

Renal artery stenosis (RAS) has traditionally been under recognized in clinical medicine as a cause of secondary hypertension and as a culprit for progressive ischemic nephropathy. While it is well recognized that atherosclerotic RAS is a progressive disease, and that surgical revascularization may result in lowering of blood pressure and prevention of progression of nephropathy, the high morbidity and mortality associated with surgical revascularization has kept the enthusiasm for revascularization low. With the recent advances in renal artery stent revascularization, a procedure that can be accomplished with <1% major complication rate, 90-95% success rate and 10-15% restenosis rate, multiple studies have reported the salutary hemodynamic benefits and increased awareness of prevalence of RAS in patients with vascular disease. Multiple studies have reported sustained blood pressure control in 70-80% of patients, stabilization of renal function in a similar percentage of patients and beneficial effect of renal artery stenting in patients with angina or heart failure. Further advances in therapy consisting of distal protection to diminish procedural atheroembolism and aggressive adjunctive medical therapy may allow clearly demonstrable benefits of renal artery stenting in prevention of ischemic nephropathy and reduction of cardiovascular events.
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PMID:Renal artery stenosis: a review of therapeutic options. 1578 82

Lack of side effects, diagnostic accuracy and recent improvements in technology qualify magnetic resonance imaging for preventive cardiovascular imaging. The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility of a comprehensive contrast-enhanced three-dimensional whole-body MR (magnetic resonance) angiography examination technique using a rolling table platform system with a 1.5-T MR system. The examination yielded diagnostic image quality in 5312 out of 5400 (98.3%) evaluated vascular segments in 180 consecutive patients with peripheral vascular disease. Besides the proved peripheral vascular disease, additional relevant vascular disease was found in 65 vessel segments in 42 patients: carotid artery stenosis (n=21), subclavian artery stenosis (n=5), renal artery stenosis (n=27) abdominal aortic aneurysm (n=7), aortic dissection (n=5). In 20 patients additional imaging studies confirmed the results of whole-body MRA without false positive or false negative findings. The described whole-body MR angiography protocol appears well suited for comprehensive evaluation of the arterial system beyond the peripheral vasculature.
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PMID:Whole body MR angiography screening. 1585 46

Renal artery disease is the most common cause of potentially curable secondary hypertension, with atherosclerosis as the major cause of renal artery stenosis. Fibromuscular dysplasia is a less common cause of renal artery stenosis and is most frequently observed in premenopausal women. Renal artery stenosis is likely to be underappreciated and is more common in patients with other vascular disease (e.g., coronary or peripheral arterial disease). The diagnosis of renal artery stenosis requires a high clinical index of suspicion as well as an appropriate imaging strategy, with currently effective diagnostic modalities including magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography and renal artery duplex ultrasonography. The current treatment of choice for atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis is balloon angioplasty and secondary stenting, whereas angioplasty alone is the treatment for renal artery stenosis secondary to fibromuscular dysplasia. Expected outcomes following revascularization include improved blood pressure control and possibly renal preservation. Ongoing studies will hopefully identify patient characteristics that will achieve the most benefit from percutaneous revascularization as well as the impact of percutaneous revascularization with drug-eluting stents and embolic protection devices.
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PMID:Renovascular hypertension. 1588 69

Previous studies have shown a relationship between coronary or carotid atherosclerosis and C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations. In the present investigation, we evaluated the relationship between high-sensitivity CRP (hsCRP) concentrations and the presence of atherosclerotic lesions in the renal arteries and/or abdominal aorta. In 95 hypertensive patients who underwent intra-arterial DSA on suspicion of renovascular disease, blood was sampled during the procedure for measurement of hsCRP. The presence of atherosclerotic lesions was assessed at the level of the renal arteries and the abdominal aorta. Haemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis was diagnosed when 50% or more stenosis was observed. Patients with fibromuscular disease (n = 8) or incomplete data (n = 4) were excluded from analysis. The results revealed that the median hsCRP concentrations were significantly higher among the 57 patients with atherosclerosis of the aorta and/or renal arteries compared to those in the 26 patients without any angiographic lesions (4.6 vs 1.7 mg/l; P < 0.005). Moreover, in patients with renal artery stenosis, levels of hsCRP were higher when the degree of stenosis exceeded 50%. However, the association between hsCRP and the presence of atherosclerosis appeared to be confounded by serum creatinine, creatinine clearance, age and gender. In the whole group a significant inverse relationship was found between creatinine clearance and hsCRP (P < 0.05). In conclusion, hsCRP concentrations are related to atherosclerotic lesions in the renal arteries and the abdominal aorta. While this supports the view that atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis is part of a systemic inflammatory vascular disease, increased concentrations of CRP may also coincide with decreased renal function.
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PMID:C-reactive protein, atherosclerosis and kidney function in hypertensive patients. 1594 20

Atherosclerotic renovascular disease (ARVD) accounts for >90% of renal artery stenosis (RAS) in Western populations; the remainder are due to fibromuscular disease (FMD). The epidemiology is quite different in the Indian subcontinent and the Far East where Takayasu's arteritis may be responsible for up to 60% of RAS cases. ARVD is very commonly associated with hypertension and renal dysfunction; it is a disease of ageing and is frequently observed in association with other vascular diseases. There is increasing evidence that in patients with ARVD and chronic renal dysfunction the aetiology of the latter is more often due to long-standing intra-renal vascular disease and parenchymal injury than to reversible ischaemia. This is reflected in the variability in renal functional outcome following revascularization, with an improvement in renal function being observed in only a minority of patients; the majority show no apparent change or even a decline in renal function. A major current challenge concerns the identification of patients who are likely to benefit from renal revascularization procedures, but technological advances in imaging offer potential in aiding this selection. Large-scale randomized controlled trials are required to determine the overall effects of renal artery intervention and, more specifically, to help identify which subgroups of patients will benefit from revascularization.
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PMID:Dilemmas in the management of renal artery stenosis. 1614 90

All participants provided informed consent to participate in this study, which was approved by the institutional review board. Breath-hold three-dimensional (3D) steady-state free precession (SSFP) magnetic resonance (MR) angiography was compared with 3D contrast material-enhanced MR angiography in patients suspected of having renal artery stenosis. Two radiologists assessed visualization of renal arteries and detection of vascular disease. With SSFP MR angiography, 39 of 41 renal arteries in 19 patients were correctly detected. Relevant stenoses were correctly identified with SSFP MR angiography in two patients. In two patients, SSFP MR angiographic data sets led to false-positive overgrading of vascular disease. Fast breath-hold 3D SSFP MR angiography appears to be feasible for MR angiography of renal arteries.
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PMID:Renal arteries: comparison of steady-state free precession MR angiography and contrast-enhanced MR angiography. 1649 15


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