Verified By Apollo Hospitals October 1, 2024
Renal artery stenosis narrows one or more blood-carrying arteries to your kidneys. Normal quantities of blood that are rich in oxygen cannot reach your kidneys due to this artery narrowing.
The kidneys need enough blood flow to filter waste materials and eliminate extra fluids. Decreased flow of blood to the kidneys may harm renal tissue and raise blood pressure throughout the body.
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Renal artery stenosis is caused by plaque accumulation in the arteries leading to the kidneys, similar to peripheral artery disease. Plaque is made up of fats and cholesterol. It builds up in the renal arteries, stiffening or narrowing them and obstructing blood flow to the kidneys. In other words, renal stenosis is a condition in which the renal arteries become blocked, resulting in poorly managed high blood pressure, congestive heart failure and kidney failure.
See a doctor if you have persistent indications or symptoms that worry you.
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Renal artery stenosis treatment may include changes in lifestyle, medicines and an operation to improve the blood flow to the kidneys.
When your blood pressure is significantly high, you can manage your blood pressure with a healthier lifestyle, diet and regular physical exercise.
Even when the primary cause is stenosis of the renal artery, high blood pressure may often be managed with medicines effectively.
Medicines used to treat high blood pressure caused by renal artery stenosis include:
Procedures to treat renal artery stenosis include:
If renal artery stenosis is caused by atherosclerosis, your doctor may prescribe aspirin and cholesterol-lowering medication. Your specific conditions decide the best medicines for you.
Renal artery stenosis is a potentially fatal disease. It may cause permanent renal damage if left untreated. If you have any unusual symptoms or believe that an underlying disease, such as hypertension, is worsening, you should see a physician. Renal artery stenosis that did not cause a significant blockage of the artery might not need any treatment. Crtical renal artery stenosis which needs treatment, is defined by American Heart Association as a reduction by more than 60% in the diameter of the renal artery.
Narrowing of the renal arteries in individuals over the age of 50 is more common. About 18 percent of individuals between 65 and 75 years of age and 42 percent of those older than 75 years of age have some degree of narrowing (more than 50 per cent). It may be because atherosclerosis is more common in this age group.
Fibromuscular dysplasia-related renal artery stenosis is a potentially deadly disease that may lead to end-stage renal failure.
It is possible to control the disease by the various management strategies discussed above .
Medicines to normalize blood pressure may also assist in delaying renal disease development. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), two kinds of blood pressure-lowering medicines, may help delay the development of kidney disease.