Ischemic renal disease: an emerging cause of chronic renal failure and end-stage renal disease

RA Preston, M Epstein - Journal of hypertension, 1997 - journals.lww.com
RA Preston, M Epstein
Journal of hypertension, 1997journals.lww.com
Ischemic renal disease (IRD) is defined as a clinically important reduction in glomerular
filtration rate or loss of renal parenchyma caused by hemodynamically significant renal
artery stenosis. IRD is a common and often overlooked clinical entity that presents itself in
the setting of extrarenal arteriosclerotic vascular disease in older individuals with azotemia.
Eleven to 14% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) cases are attributable to chronic IRD. A
high percentage of patients entering ESRD programs are hypertensive. Many patients with a …
Abstract
Ischemic renal disease (IRD) is defined as a clinically important reduction in glomerular filtration rate or loss of renal parenchyma caused by hemodynamically significant renal artery stenosis. IRD is a common and often overlooked clinical entity that presents itself in the setting of extrarenal arteriosclerotic vascular disease in older individuals with azotemia. Eleven to 14% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) cases are attributable to chronic IRD. A high percentage of patients entering ESRD programs are hypertensive. Many patients with a presumed diagnosis of hypertensive nephrosclerosis actually have undiagnosed ischemic nephropathy as the etiology of their ESRD. It is important for the clinician to identify IRD, because IRD is a potentially reversible cause of chronic renal failure in a hypertensive patient.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins