| Literature DB >> 27751879 |
David G Reuter1, Yuk Law2, Wayne C Levy3, Stephen P Seslar2, R Eugene Zierler4, Mark Ferguson5, James Chattra6, Tim McQuinn2, Lenna L Liu7, Mark Terry8, Patricia S Coffey9, Jane A Dimer10, Coral Hanevold11, Joseph T Flynn11, F Bruder Stapleton11.
Abstract
The morbidity and mortality associated with preeclampsia is staggering. The physiology of the Page kidney, a condition in which increased intrarenal pressure causes hypertension, appears to provide a unifying framework to explain the complex pathophysiology. Page kidney hypertension is renin-mediated acutely and ischemia-mediated chronically. Renal venous outflow obstruction also causes a Page kidney phenomenon, providing a hypothesis for the increased vulnerability of a subset of women who have what we are hypothesizing is a "renal compartment syndrome" due to inadequate ipsilateral collateral renal venous circulation consistent with well-known variation in normal venous anatomy. Dynamic changes in renal venous anatomy and physiology in pregnancy appear to correlate with disease onset, severity, and recurrence. Since maternal recumbent position is well known to affect renal perfusion and since chronic outflow obstruction makes women vulnerable to the ischemic/inflammatory sequelae, heightened awareness of renal compartment syndrome physiology is critical. The anatomic and physiologic insights provide immediate strategies to predict and prevent preeclampsia with straightforward, low-cost interventions that make renewed global advocacy for pregnant women a realistic goal.Entities:
Keywords: Gestational hypertension; hypertension; obesity-related hypertension; renal ischemia
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27751879 DOI: 10.1016/j.jash.2016.09.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Hypertens ISSN: 1878-7436