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Mechanisms of hypertension during and after orthotopic liver transplantation in children
Authors
Akerstedt
Andrews
+71 more
Ann Thompson
Arroyo
Bantle
Bantle
Baxter
Baylis
Bellet
Bernardi
Better
Bland
Bomzon
Bonjour
Borland
Busuttil
Cappuccio
Carlos Esquivel
Chrymko
Clement de Clety
Curtis
D. Ryan Cook
Demetrius Ellis
Epstein
Eskay
Filep
Floras
Gaillard
Gardner
Gartner
Gentile
Gerr
Glantz
Graystone
Henriksen
Hiatt
Januszewicz
Kimura
Kohno
Lau
Ledsome
Leslie
Loughran
Lustig
Mason
Minuk
Moss
Murrey
Nakai
Nicholls
Oaks
Ogawa
Palestine
Papadakis
Powell-Jackson
Ring-Larsen
Ring-Larsen
Rosanto
Salazar
Schacter
Seino
Shapiro
Skorecki
Starzl
Stephen Lawless
Task Force on Blood Pressure Control in Children
Thomas Starzl
Thompson
Vacanti
Voorhees
Weidle
Weidmann
Williams
Publication date
1 January 1989
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the hormonal alterations that may mediate the systemic hypertension that develops in patients during the perioperative period of orthotopic liver transplantation. We studied nine pediatric patients without previous hypertension or renal disease during six time points, starting before transplantation and ending at 48 hours after surgery. Hypertension developed in all patients in association with central venous pressures <10 mm Hg. Free water clearance was negative in all nine patients. Vasopressin levels increased intraoperatively but fell as hypertension developed. Atrial natriuretic factor levels increased as systemic blood pressure rose. A high level of plasma renin activity was observed in four patients with renal insufficiency. In six patients, postoperative 24-hour urinary norepinephrine excretion was within the normal age-adjusted range. These findings suggest that the combination of cyclosporine, corticosteroids, and, in some patients, an elevated plasma renin activity prevents the kidney from responding to the acute volume and salt overload with an appropriate diuresis and natriuresis, thus leading to systemic hypertension. The treatment of hypertension after liver transplantation may include salt restriction, diuretics, and, in those patients with a low creatinine excretion index, anglotensin coverting enzyme inhibitors. © 1989 The C. V. Mosby Company
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