Abstract

Background: Visit-to-visit blood pressure variability (VVBPV) results from regional or systemic circulatory factors such as stiffness or neuro-hormonal factors. Association between VVBPV and long-term post-kidney transplant (KT) blood pressure (BP) is unknown. Method: VVBPV was measured by average successive variability (ASV), which is the average absolute difference between successive BP measured at 4, 12, and 24 weeks post-KT. Association between the VVBPV and BP at 48 weeks post-KT was examined by multiple linear regression. Results: Of all 105 KT recipients, mean age±SD was 54±12 years and 64 patients (61%) was female. Mean ASV of SBP and DBP were 16±12 mmHg (range 1-58) and 11±6.3 mmHg (range 1-29.5), respectively. Mean SBP at 24 and 48 weeks post-KT were 135±19 and 133±16 mmHg, respectively. Similar to SBP, mean DBP at 24 weeks post-KT was higher than DBP at 48 weeks (DBP 24 vs 48 weeks 80±12 vs 77±11 mmHg). Every 10-mmHg increase in ASV of SBP predicts 3.4 mmHg increase in SBP at 48 weeks post-KT (p 0.01; 95%CI 0.83, 6.14; Figure 1A). However, an increase in 10 mmHg of ASV of DBP predicts a decrease in DBP of 0.12 mmHg (p 0.12, 95%CI -0.28, 0.04; Figure 1B). After adjusted for age, gender, donor type (deceased vs living), induction immunosuppressive medications, pre-KT weight-spline interaction term at 70 kg, every 10 mmHg increase in ASV of SBP was significantly associated with 2.7 mmHg increase in SBP at 48 weeks post-KT (p 0.04, 95%CI 0.15, 5.29); whereas, 10 mmHg increase in ASV of DBP predicts a decrease in DBP of 2.13 mmHg with no statistical significance (p 0.16, 95% -5.14, 0.88) Conclusion: Higher VVSBPV during early post-KT predicts a higher SBP, but not DBP, at late post-KT period.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call