Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8652263 Annales de Cardiologie et d'Angéiologie 2018 4 Pages PDF
Abstract
The onset of renal artery stenosis following a renal denervation is rare and occurs in the first few months after renal denervation. We report the onset of renal artery stenosis a long time after the renal denervation for resistant hypertension. This is a 74 year-old patient who stopped smoking in 1980 and who was treated for dyslipidemia with a revascularized coronary artery disease in 2011, a well-stabilized peripheral arterial disease since 2001, a stable asymptomatic carotid atheroma and a good kidney function. His hypertension known since 1995 became resistant. After the control of renal arteries by angio-CT scan, he had a renal denervation in October 2012. His blood pressure decreased 3 months later confirmed by self-blood pressure monitoring (SBPM) and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) with a CT scan with a non-significant renal artery stenosis in January 2014. He remained normotensive under treatment until July 2015 but his hypertension became uncontrolled at the end of 2015 then resistant and severe confirmed by SBPM in April 2017, despite a 5-drug antihypertensive treatment associated to atorvastatin and clopidogrel confirmed by SBPM in April 2017. A left post-ostial renal artery stenosis with decrease in size of left kidney and cortex as compared to 2011 was detected at CT and treated by angioplasty. It was associated with a rapid decrease in blood pressure but unfortunately a new increase related to a restenosis occurred at the end of 2017, which justified a new angioplasty. Discussion about the etiology and the management of this renal post-denervation late stenosis.
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