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What factors would lead you to consider revascularization in a patient with bilateral renal artery stenosis between 50-70% who has persistently uncontrolled hypertension despite maximal medical therapy?

3 Answers
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Nephrology · LSU Health Sciences Center - Shreveport

Several randomized controlled trials (RCTs) (STAR 2009, ASTRAL 2009, CORAL 2013) have shown that medical therapy has similar outcomes to revascularization (stenting) in patients with 50-70% renal artery stenosis (RAS). In these RCTs, serious complications of the interventional procedures occurred in...

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Nephrology · UAB Medicine

This is a clinical judgement. Things I would consider are: effectiveness of medical therapy (is the patient tolerating max doses of the foundation BP meds: long-acting thiazide, ACEi/ARB, amlodipine); symptoms of flash pulmonary edema or abrupt volume overload, signs of end-organ damage like diastol...

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Nephrology · Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine

If renal artery stenosis is considered to be hemodynamically significant and between 50-70%, I would consider revascularization if there were the following factors:

  1. Recurrent, unexplained pulmonary edema (flash pulmonary edema)
  2. Accelerating decline in kidney function, particularly if the decline is ...

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What factors would lead you to consider revascularization in a patient with bilateral renal artery stenosis between 50-70% who has persistently uncontrolled hypertension despite maximal medical therapy? | Mednet