| Literature DB >> 770034 |
J J Curtis, J H Galla, T A Kotchen, B Lucas, J W McRoberts, R G Luke.
Abstract
A study of the prevalence of hypertension in a group of renal transplant patients on alternate-day maintenance steroid therapy was conducted. Twenty-four percent of the transplant clinic population was hypertensive. The factors that were associated with a lower prevalence of hypertension were good graft function, bilateral nephrectomy of the patients' own diseased kidneys (although the majority of our patients without bilateral nephrectomy are normotensive), and use of a living related donor. We conclude that the prevalance of hypertension in transplant patients on alternate-day steroid therapy is low. In the presence of all these favorable factors, only 6% of allograft recipients were hypertensive.Entities:
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Year: 1976 PMID: 770034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Nephrol ISSN: 0301-0430 Impact factor: 0.975