A positive saralasin test in patients with angiographic evidence of renovascular disease and other positive functional tests gives further assurance that these patients will achieve normal or substantially reduced blood pressure postoperatively. In our experience with proved renovascular hypertension there was a 19 per cent incidence of falsely negative saralasin tests. Therefore, saralasin should not be used as the sole screening test in hypertensive patients suspected of having surgically correctable lesions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans Am Assoc Genitourin Surg
July 1980
A positive saralasin test in patients with angiographic evidence of renovascular disease and other positive functional tests gives further assurance that these patients will achieve normal or substantially reduced blood pressure postoperatively. In our experience with proved renovascular hypertension there was a 19% incidence of falsely negative saralasin tests. Therefore, saralasin should not be used as the sole screening test in hypertensive patients suspected of having surgically correctable lesions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChronic pyelonephritis secondary to vesicoureteral reflux has been shown to cause occasionally systemic hypertension. The hypertension may occur in the presence or absence of bacterial urinary infection, is renin-mediated and may develop years after ureteral reimplantation. Surgical excision of a scarred atrophic renin-producing segment may result in amelioration of the hypertension or at least provide better medical control with less toxic antihypertensive agents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF