Abstract

Seventeen children with renovascular hypertension were managed at the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, over the 20-year period from 1975 to 1996. The age at presentation ranged from 10 days to 18 years. All children presented with severe hypertension with mean systolic blood pressure 7 standard deviations above age-matched averages and mean diastolic blood pressure 5.5 standard deviations above age-matched averages. Neurofibromatosis was the most common etiology (58% of patients) and there were no cases of Takayasu's arteritis. Patients underwent a variety of biochemical and imaging investigations but in all cases renal angiography was necessary for definitive diagnosis and for planning therapy. Ten of the 17 patients had surgical procedures performed. Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty was performed in four patients but led to cure in only one patient following thrombosis of the affected artery producing segmental renal infarction. Other vascular reconstructive procedures, including the use of autologous or synthetic bypass grafts and autotransplantation, produced cure of hypertension in 50% of children with improvement in a further 30%. The long-term outlook for children treated with surgical reconstructive procedures was excellent. One patient underwent surgery for avulsion of an arterial graft following a pubertal growth spurt. No other patient originally cured by surgery has required reoperation with no cases of restenosis at a mean follow-up of 11 years 3 months.

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