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  • Title: Does captopril reduce renal function in renovascular disease by postglomerular vasodilatation?
    Author: Schwietzer G, Laass C, Kampf D, Bähr V, Schultze G, Molzahn M, Distler A.
    Journal: J Hypertens Suppl; 1985 Nov; 3(2):S139-41. PubMed ID: 3910770.
    Abstract:
    In hypertensive patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis (RAS) or RAS of a solitary kidney, reversible decrease of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) or acute renal failure has been observed following captopril administration. Decrease of GFR has been ascribed to preferential efferent vasodilatation. To test this hypothesis, acute changes of mean arterial pressure (MAP), renal plasma flow (RPF), GFR, plasma renin activity (PRA) and PGE2-excretion after 50 mg captopril orally were measured in post-transplant hypertensives with and without transplant renal artery stenosis (TRAS) during treatment with diuretics. The fall in MAP was similar in both groups; RPF did not change significantly; GFR decreased from 58 +/- 14 (s.d.) to 49 +/- 14 ml/min (TRAS, n = 8) and from 60 +/- 15 to 50 +/- 16 ml/min (without TRAS, n = 8). There was no evidence of postglomerular dilatation in patients with TRAS, and filtration fraction decreased only in patients without TRAS. Increase of PRA after captopril was not significantly different between the two groups. PGE2-excretion did not change significantly. In one patient with severe TRAS, long term angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition and acute normalization of MAP with sodium nitroprusside both induced a comparable decrease of GFR. The results demonstrate that acute postglomerular vasodilatation does not necessarily occur after ACE inhibition in patients with TRAS and a high-renin state.
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