Artigo Revisado por pares

The use of peridialysis blood pressure and intradialytic blood pressure changes in the prediction of interdialytic blood pressure in haemodialysis patients

2003; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 8; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/00126097-200312000-00004

ISSN

1473-5725

Autores

Roger B. Mendes, Sergio F. F. Santos, David Dorigo, George A. Mansoor, Susan T. Crowley, William B. White, Aldo J. Peixoto,

Tópico(s)

Pharmacological Effects and Toxicity Studies

Resumo

Objective It is uncertain which blood pressure values (pre- or post-haemodialysis) best represent the average daily blood pressure in haemodialysis patients. The purpose of this study was to verify the power of peridialysis blood pressure to predict interdialytic blood pressure, and to ascertain the influence of blood pressure fluctuations during dialysis on this predictive ability. Methods and results We performed ambulatory blood pressure monitoring during the interdialytic period on 60 stable haemodialysis patients (mean age 53±16 years, 33 male) between two mid-week haemodialysis sessions. Pre- and post-haemodialysis blood pressures were 154/82 and 142/77 mmHg, respectively, and 44-h interdialytic blood pressure was 136/77 mmHg. Overall, post-haemodialysis blood pressure values correlated with interdialytic ambulatory blood pressure marginally better than did pre-haemodialysis values (r=0.52 versus 0.61 for pre- and post-dialysis systolic pressure, respectively; r=0.67 versus 0.72 for pre- and post-dialysis diastolic pressure, respectively). The average of the pre- and post-haemodialysis values showed a slightly better correlation with interdialytic blood pressure (r=0.65 and 0.75 for systolic and diastolic pressure, respectively). When we stratified patients according to systolic blood pressure behaviour during dialysis, pre-dialysis blood pressure was the stronger predictor of interdialytic blood pressure in the quartile with greatest intradialytic blood pressure fall (r=0.67 versus 0.44 for pre- and post-dialysis systolic blood pressure, respectively), whereas post-dialysis values were substantially better in the group with a rise in systolic pressure during dialysis (r=0.26 versus 0.59 for pre- and post-dialysis systolic blood pressure, respectively). Conclusions These data demonstrate that peridialysis blood pressure values are of limited accuracy in predicting interdialytic blood pressure, post-dialysis values are minimally better predictors than pre-dialysis blood pressures, and the average of pre- and post-haemodialysis values is marginally better than both. In addition, blood pressure fluctuations during dialysis have a sizable impact on this predictive ability. Clinical decisions related to blood pressure management and research design in haemodialysis hypertension should take these factors into account.

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