Elevated 24-hour blood pressure in peritoneal dialysis patients with ultrafiltration failure

W. J. Bos, D. G. Struijk, R. W. van Olden, L. Arisz, R. T. Krediet

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Abstract

Many patients treated with peritoneal dialysis (PD) are overhydrated. We investigated whether hypertension in PD patients is related to ultrafiltration-failure-induced fluid retention. Twenty-four-hour blood pressure measurements were performed in 10 normotensive and 9 hypertensive PD patients, aged 20 to 77 years, and treated with PD for 2 to 125 months. Antihypertensive medication had been discontinued for 3 weeks. Twenty-four-hour blood pressure was monitored with a Spacelabs 90207. Mean 24-hour systolic, mean, and diastolic pressure were calculated, together with the nighttime (23:00-07:00)/daytime (07:00-23:00) ratio. Ultrafiltration was determined separately during a standardized 4-hour peritoneal permeability analysis (SPA) with 1.36% glucose. Based on the SPA, patients were divided into a group with negative net ultrafiltration (NUF) and a group with positive net ultrafiltration (PUF). In 8 patients with NUF, systolic, mean, and diastolic pressures were 142 +/- 16 mmHg, 110 +/- 14 mmHg, and 95 +/- 13 mmHg, compared to 135 +/- 22 (ns), 99 +/- 14 (ns), and 81 +/- 11 (P < 0.05) in 11 patients with PUF. Net ultrafiltration during the test dwell correlated negatively with diastolic blood pressure (r = -0.53, P < 0.05). Diurnal blood pressure variations were not related to ultrafiltration capacity. In conclusion, hypertension in PD patients may in part be explained by fluid retention caused by impaired ultrafiltration
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)108-110
JournalAdvances in peritoneal dialysis. Conference on Peritoneal Dialysis
Volume14
Publication statusPublished - 1998

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