Results 331 to 340 of about 276,515 (394)
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Renal artery stenosis

Current Treatment Options in Cardiovascular Medicine, 2001
Renal artery stenosis (RAS) can accelerate or generate progressive hypertension and renal dysfunction. The goals for treating patients with RAS are to reduce cardiovascular morbidity and mortality attributable to elevated arterial pressure and to preserve renal function beyond critical stenosis.
Stephen C. Textor, Michael A. McKusick
  +9 more sources

Renal artery stenosis

Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases, 2021
Renal artery stenosis is the most common secondary cause of hypertension and predominantly caused by atherosclerosis. In suspected patients, a non-invasive diagnosis with ultrasound is preferred. Asymptomatic, incidentally found RAS does not require revascularization.
openaire   +3 more sources

Resistant Hypertension and Atherosclerotic Renal Artery Stenosis: Effects of Angioplasty on Ambulatory Blood Pressure. A Retrospective Uncontrolled Single-Center Study.

HYPERTENSION, 2019
The effect of renal artery angioplasty on blood pressure in patients with true resistant hypertension and atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis has not been fully investigated due to the exclusion of these patients from most trials.
P. Courand   +10 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Screening for Transplant Renal Artery Stenosis: Ultrasound-Based Stenosis Probability Stratification.

AJR. American journal of roentgenology, 2017
OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to evaluate which spectral Doppler ultrasound parameters are useful in patients with clinical concern for transplant renal artery stenosis (TRAS) and create mathematically derived prediction models that are based ...
G. Fananapazir   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Renal artery stenosis

Current Treatment Options in Cardiovascular Medicine, 1999
Among the indications for renal artery revascularization, either surgical or endovascular, in patients with renal artery stenosis are poorly controlled hypertension, ischemic nephropathy (preservation of renal function), or recurrent episodes of "flash" pulmonary edema and congestive heart failure.
Susan M. Begelman, Jeffrey W. Olin
openaire   +3 more sources

Renal Artery Stenosis

2014
As a result of the recent highly publicized but poorly designed randomized trials, renal artery angioplasty and stenting have become underutilized as the treatment of choice even in carefully selected patients with hemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis due to atheroma and/or fibromuscular dysplasia.
Noor Ahmad   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

An international multicenter comparison of time-SLIP unenhanced MR angiography and contrast-enhanced CT angiography for assessing renal artery stenosis: the renal artery contrast-free trial.

AJR. American journal of roentgenology, 2015
OBJECTIVE The unenhanced MR angiography (MRA) technique time-spatial labeling inversion pulse (time-SLIP) may provide a safe alternative for evaluating the renal arteries for stenosis.
T. Albert   +11 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Renal artery stenosis

Current Treatment Options in Cardiovascular Medicine, 2007
Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) and aortoarteritis are the most frequent causes of secondary hypertension induced by renal artery stenosis (RAS). Revascularization of this disease entity usually cures arterial hypertension. Demographic evolution leads to an increasing incidence of atherosclerotic RAS, one of the major causes of end-stage renal failure ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Endovascular Approach to Transplant Renal Artery Stenosis.

Annals of Transplantation, 2015
BACKGROUND The endovascular approach has shown high initial technical success rates, good patency rates, and minimal complications in treating transplant renal artery stenosis (TRAS).
A. F. Braga   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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