American journal of hypertension
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Clinical Trial
Loss of nocturnal blood pressure fall after liver transplantation during immunosuppressive therapy.
Hypertension, which develops after organ transplantation during immunosuppression with cyclosporine (CSA), is often associated with a loss of nocturnal decrease in blood pressure. Few data correlate circadian blood pressure patterns before transplant with those observed at fixed time points after transplant, or address the role of alternate immunosuppressive agents such as FK506. FK506 is unrelated structurally to CSA and less often leads to hypertension early after transplant. ⋯ Patients with ESLD were normotensive and maintained a normal nocturnal blood pressure fall (125 +/- 3/74 +/- 2 mm Hg awake; 109 +/- 3/60 +/- 2 mm Hg nocturnal). Awake ambulatory blood pressures were higher in CSA patients than in FK506 patients (148 +/- 3/95 +/- 2 v 128 +/- 3/78 +/- 2 mm Hg, respectively; P < .01), despite reduced glomerular filtration rates in both transplant groups. Both immunosuppressive regimens led to a loss of nocturnal blood pressure fall, as compared to ESLD patients or normotensive controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)