Renal artery stenosis in 201 patients with hypertension was treated with percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA). A total of 213 procedures were performed as treatment of 262 separate stenosis. The stenosis was caused by atherosclerosis in 134 cases and by fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) in 52 cases; the cause was indeterminate in 27 cases. Of the 213 procedures, 172 were successful or resulted in improvement, for a technical success rate of 80.8%. The initial clinical results could be evaluated in 210 cases; cure or improvement was achieved in 80%. There were 23 cases in which neither technical nor clinical success was achieved. Data on the remaining 187 cases were the basis of this long-term follow-up study. The cumulative patency rate at 5 years was 80% in the atherosclerosis group, 89% in the FMD group, and 74% in the indeterminate group. The mortality was less than 1%. Because spasm occurred in 33 cases, causing an infarction in ten instances, antispasmodic medication seems warranted. These long-term results indicate that PTRA is the treatment of choice in patients with renovascular hypertension.
Percutaneous transluminal renal angioplasty (PTRA) was performed in 12 children and adolescents with renal artery stenosis. Patients were divided into three groups: those with a short stenosis in the middle or distal part of the renal artery (n = 5), those with a short stenosis at or near the origin of the renal artery (n = 3), and those with a long stenosis at or near the origin (n = 4). The patients in the first group responded to PTRA. Those in the second group had a poor clinical response, and dilation was unsuccessful in the patients in the third group, who remained hypertensive. The location and length of the renal artery stenosis and its underlying cause appear to be important in determining the results of PTRA.
Two cases are reported in which rupture of the renal artery occurred many hours after renal percutaneous transluminal angioplasty. Delayed rupture can be recognized by the angiographic appearance and by the presence of persistent flank pain. The typical angiographic finding is a poorly defined zone of contrast medium at the site of perforation.
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