• Title of article

    Evaluation of Arterial Stiffness and Pulse Wave Reflection for Cardiovascular Risk Assessment in Diabetic and Nondiabetic Kidney Transplant Recipients

  • Author/Authors

    Khoshdel, Ali Reza aja university of medical sciences - Faculty of Medicine, ايران , Khoshdel, Ali Reza University of Newcastle - Faculty of Health, Australia , Carney, Shane L University of Newcastle - Faculty of Health, Australia , Trevillian, Paul University of Newcastle - Faculty of Health, Australia , Gillies, Alastair University of Newcastle - Faculty of Health, Australia

  • From page
    237
  • To page
    243
  • Abstract
    Introduction. Evidence demonstrates that cardiovascular risk reduces after kidney transplantation, but is still a major cause of death. With increasing inclusion of diabetic patients for kidney transplantation, the evaluation of cardiovascular disease in this population becomes more important. We compared arterial stiffness and pulse wave reflection as well as other cardiovascular risk factors in kidney transplant patients with and without diabetes mellitus. Materials and Methods. One hundred kidney transplant recipients, including 33 diabetic patients, were evaluated for their renalcardiovascularrisk factors, including blood pressure, lipids, glucose control, homocysteine, and arterial stiffness indexes. The tests were repeated after 1 year in 47 individuals. Results. There was no significant difference in pulse wave velocity (PWV) between the diabetic and nondiabetic groups, despite agreater augmentation index (AI) in the diabetic group (20.5 ± 2.3 versus 13.1 ± 2.2). Multivariable analysis revealed that diabetes mellitus was a significant determinant for AI independently of age, blood pressure, posttransplant time, gender, and glomerular filtration rate (R2 = 39%). Repeated test after 1 year demonstrated a significant reduction in the carotid-femoral PWV (P = .03) and systolic blood pressure (P = .007). Conclusions. In contrast to nontransplant groups, AI was significantlygreater in diabetic kidney transplant patients compared to their nondiabetic counterparts, despite a comparable PWV. However, carotid-femoral PWV improved after 1 year. These may reflect progressive ventricular and large arterial function improvement despite remained small arterial defects after transplantation. It also suggests potential role of arterial evaluation in risk assessment among kidney transplant patients.
  • Keywords
    arterial compliance , kidney transplantation , diabetes mellitus
  • Journal title
    Iranian Journal of Kidney Diseases (IJKD)
  • Journal title
    Iranian Journal of Kidney Diseases (IJKD)
  • Record number

    2669759