Abstract

The improved longevity of heart transplant recipients demands heightened awareness of the long-term complications of the procedure. Between 1979 and 1990, 232 patients received 241 heart transplants at our institution. Accelerated coronary atherosclerosis occurred in 45 (19%) of the 232 patients, typically appearing within 2 years of transplantation, whereas peripheral vascular disease (PVD) appeared in 23 (10%) of the 232 patients, usually within 3 years of transplantation. In the patients with PVD, 13 had occlusive disease, nine had aneurysms, and one patient suffered a vertebral artery dissection. Accelerated coronary atherosclerosis afflicted 12 (52%) of the 23 patients affected by PVD (p < 0.05) and preceded the development of PVD in all 12. Logistic regression analysis revealed risk factors predictive of the development of PVD after transplantation to be a pretransplant history of ischemic cardiomyopathy and posttransplant hypertension and hypertriglyceridemia (p < 0.05), with the presence of more than one risk factor increasing the probability of development of PVD. Those patients thus identified as at risk should be closely monitored for the development of PVD. Aggressive medical management of hypertension and hyperlipidemia in this subpopulation may forestall or prevent the development of peripheral vascular disease after heart transplantation.

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