Predictive value of angiotensin II antagonists in renovascular hypertension
F. M. Fouad, R. W. Gifford Jr, S. Fighali, S. K. Mujais, A. C. Novick, E. L. Bravo and R. C. Tarazi
An angiotensin II antagonist, sarcosine-1, threonine-8 angiotensin II (
[Sar1, Thr8] A II), was infused preoperatively in 14 patients with renal
artery stenosis. Postoperative graft patency was documented by renal flow
scan in 13 patients. One of these required antihypertensive therapy
immediately after surgery, while the other 12 had a significant BP
reduction in the first postoperative week (141 +/- 3.7 to 110 +/- 1.6 mm
Hg). With longer follow-up, six patients remained normotensive (group 1),
while the other six had "residual hypertension" (group 2). There was no
significant difference between the two groups as regards age, preoperative
BP level, plasma renin activity, blood volume, or response to [Sar1, Thr8]
A II. In contrast, clinical signs were most helpful in predicting response
to surgery. "Cured" patients had shorter duration of hypertension (less
than one year) than patients with residual hypertension, and less
impairment of renal excretory function; three patients in group 2 but none
in group 1 had a history of malignant hypertension. The decision to operate
remains a multifactorial evaluation and cannot be based on results of any
single test alone.