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The presentation and management of hypertension in a large cohort of Takayasu arteritis.

The objective of this study was to explore the presentation and management of hypertension secondary to Takayasu arteritis (TA) in a large cohort, single center in China. We retrospectively analyzed 381 TA patients with hypertension hospitalized in Fuwai hospital between Jan. 2004 and Feb. 2014. Diagnosis of hypertension was according to clinic blood pressure or the central blood pressure measured during angiography. Renal artery stenosis was the most common cause (264, 69.3%), followed by the thoracic descending aorta stenosis (98, 25.7%), abdominal aorta stenosis (78, 20.5%), and severe aortic regurgitation (45, 11.8%). More than two kinds of pathologies were found in 98 (25.7%) patients. The mean age of hypertension onset was 25.0 ± 14.3 years. The mean blood pressure of upper extremity in patients without bilateral subclavian artery stenosis (321, 84.3%) was 176.0 ± 29.4 mmHg/97.2 ± 23.0 mmHg, while in 60 (15.7%) patients with bilateral subclavian artery stenosis, the mean central blood pressure was 192.7 ± 30.8 mmHg/102.4 ± 121.1 mmHg. A total of 305 were followed for 38.4 ± 36.7 months, and the rate of blood pressure control, improvement, and failure was 50.8, 41.0, and 8.2%, respectively. Immunosuppressive therapy (OR 2.402, 95% confidence interval 1.253-4.603, P = 0.008) and the pathogenesis of hypertension (P = 0.010) were associated with prognosis of hypertension. The pathogenesis of hypertension due to TA is very complex and multifactorial. Renal artery stenosis is most frequently observed, followed by stenosis of the thoracic descending aorta, abdominal aorta, and severe aortic regurgitation. Immunosuppressive therapy and identifying the pathogenesis of hypertension is of great importance in patients with TA.

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