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A Comparative Study of Short-Term Blood Pressure Variability in Hemodialysis Patients with and without Intradialytic Hypertension.

TitleA Comparative Study of Short-Term Blood Pressure Variability in Hemodialysis Patients with and without Intradialytic Hypertension.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsBikos, A., Angeloudi E., Memmos E., Loutradis C., Karpetas A., Ginikopoulou E., Panagoutsos S., Pasadakis P., Liakopoulos V., Papagianni A., & Sarafidis P.
JournalAm J Nephrol
Volume48
Issue4
Pagination295-305
Date Published2018
ISSN1421-9670
KeywordsAged, Biological Variation, Individual, Blood Pressure, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Female, Humans, Hypertension, Kidney Failure, Chronic, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Renal Dialysis, Risk Factors, Time Factors
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Short-term blood pressure (BP) variability (BPV) is associated with increased cardiovascular risk in hemodialysis. Patients with intradialytic hypertension have high risk of adverse outcomes. Whether BPV is increased in these patients is not clear. The purpose of this study was to compare short-term BPV in patients with and without intradialytic hypertension.METHODS: Forty-one patients with and 82 patients without intradialytic hypertension (intradialytic SBP rise ≥10 mm Hg to > 150 mm Hg) matched in a 1: 2 ratio for age, sex, and hemodialysis vintage were included. All subjects underwent 48-h ambulatory BP monitoring during a regular hemodialysis and the subsequent interdialytic interval. Brachial and aortic BPV were calculated with validated formulas and compared between the 2 groups during the 48-h and the 44-h periods and during the 2 daytime and nighttime periods respectively.RESULTS: During 48-h or 44-h periods and daytime or nighttime, brachial SBP/DBP and aortic SBP/DBP were significantly higher in cases than in controls. All brachial SBP/DBP BPV indexes [SD, weighted SD (wSD), coefficient-of-variation (CV) and average-real-variability (ARV)] were not significantly different between groups during the 48- or 44-h periods (48-h: SBP-ARV 11.59 ± 3.05 vs. 11.70 ± 2.68, p = 0.844, DBP-ARV: 8.60 ± 1.90 vs. 8.90 ± 1.63, p = 0.357). Analysis stratified by day or night between days 1 and 2 revealed, in general, similar results. No significant differences in dipping pattern were observed between groups. Analysis of aortic BPV had similar findings.CONCLUSIONS: BPV is similar between those with and without intradialytic hypertension. However, those with intradialytic hypertension have a sustained increase in systolic and diastolic BP during the entire interdialytic interval.

DOI10.1159/000493989
Alternate JournalAm J Nephrol
PubMed ID30347395

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