Abstract

During a 4-year period, acute renal failure was observed in 27 patients (mean age 65 years) treated by various angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors for hypertension, heart failure, or a combination of both. None had significant renal artery stenosis on angiography. Overt volume depletion was present in 21 and hypotension in 12 cases. All patients received diuretic therapy and/or a low-salt diet. Other facilitating factors included cardiac failure, pre-existing chronic renal insufficiency, combined therapy with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, and diabetes mellitus. Twenty-two patients had two or more of these factors at presentation. A renal biopsy performed in 10 cases showed severe arteriosclerosis of small renal arteries in eight and acute tubular necrosis in five instances. Therapy comprised volume expansion, and withdrawal of diuretics and, except in two patients, of ACE inhibitors. Twenty-one patients recovered normal renal function, two died, and permanent renal damage remained in four. These results suggest that sodium depletion has a critical role in inducing acute renal failure, whose outcome is not always benign. A combination of diuretics and ACE inhibitors should be prescribed with caution, especially in older patients with small as well as with large renal vessel disease.

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