Renal Artery Stenosis

  • Narrowing of the renal artery.
    • Be aware that mild stenosis is normal and causes only minor hemodynamic effect.
  • Significant renal artery stenosis is the most common cause of secondary hypertension.
    • Stenosis reduces renal blood flow, which triggers the juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA) in the kidney and activates the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system as follows:
    • JGA activation triggers the release of renin, which converts angiotensinogen to angiotensin I
    • Angiotensin I is converted to Angiotensin II by Angiotensin-Converting-Enzyme (ACE)
    • Angiotensin II increases the retention of sodium and water in the renal tubules (which increases water volume) and activates sympathetic and hormonal vasoconstriction of the peripheral arterial system.
  • Inappropriate systemic vasoconstriction induces hypertension, ischemic nephropathy, and in severe cases, heart failure and acute coronary syndromes.
  • Renal arterial stenosis can be unilateral or bilateral.
  • The top causes of stenosis are:
    • Atherosclerosis and fibromuscular dysplasia.
    • Atherosclerosis is common in older people, especially those with a history of cigarette smoking.
    • Fibromuscular dysplasia is a systemic, noninflammatory, nonatherosclerotic disease of the vascular walls; abnormal cellular proliferation in the arterial walls produces stenosis, which can be unifocal or multifocal with a "string of beads" appearance.
    • Fibromuscular dysplasia is more often diagnosed in women, who are 30-50 years old, and, in addition to arterial stenosis, can also cause aneurysms, dissection, and tortuosity.
  • Signs and Symptoms:
    • We suspect renal artery stenosis in patients who have sudden onset of hypertension without a family history.
    • In these patients, hypertension is severe and resistant to antihypertensive agents.
    • We may hear abdominal bruits.
  • Patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis (or unilateral stenosis in single-kidney patients) may present with Pickering syndrome, which is characterized by "flash" pulmonary edema.
  • Diagnosis: Renal arteriogram (contraindicated in patients with renal failure, as the contrast dye is nephrotoxic); MRA (magnetic resonance angiography), and Duplex Doppler ultrasonography. If these non-invasive tests are not conclusive, we can use catheter angiograph.
  • Treatment of renal artery stenosis includes medical and surgical interventions:
    • We can use antihypertensives drugs, diuretics, statins, and antiplatelet therapies.
    • Be aware that we need to monitor patients for acute kidney injury.
    • ACE inhibitors are contraindicated in patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis or unilateral stenosis in single-kidney patients.
  • Percutaneous renal artery stenting may be necessary in severe cases of atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis, and it is often curative in fibromuscular dysplasia.