Abstract

The renal blood flow velocity characteristics in 8 normal controls, 19 essential hypertensive patients and 8 hypertensive patients with renovascular disease were evaluated using echo-Doppler velocimetry. Two different approaches for ultrasonic detection of the renal artery, the translumbar and the transabdominal approach, were used. Renal Doppler sonograms were analyzed by measuring the acceleration index and the peak-systolic frequency/end-diastolic frequency ( S D ) ratio. Renovascular patients who required surgery were examined before and after angioplasty. Doppler signals could be detected in all 35 subjects by using the translumbar approach. The accleration index of the affected renal arteries significantly correlated to the percent stenosis of the renal artery determined by angiography. The acceleration index in the affected renal artery was improved by surgical treatment. The S D ratio in essential hypertensives was significantly higher than that in the normal controls. There was a significant inverse correlation between the S D ratio and creatinine clearance. Echo-Doppler velocimetry is considered to be useful in the diagnosis of renovascular disease and also in the evaluation of abnormalities of renal vascular resistance in hypertensive patients.

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