Non-dipper effect in hypertense patients after renal transplantation by 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring

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Abstract

Objective: Determinate instant and after 1-month non-dipper effect in hypertense patients after renal transplant by 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Hospital General de Zona No. 50, San Luis Potosí, Mexico. Method: Descriptive, longitudinal and prospective cohort study of a non-probability convenience sampling in post-transplant patients with hypertension. We collected data from MAPA and includes age, sex, cardiovascular risk factors in variables. Use of central tendency and dispersion measures for descriptive analysis and t Student for inferential analysis. Results: 19 patients were included, 11 male (57.9%) and 8 females (42.1%), with age range 20 to 49 years (median of 30.2 years ± 7.7). Where the non-dipper effect in the first take was 89.5% and in the second take 84.2%. Conclusions: There is a high frequency of the non-dipper pattern in patients at one month of kidney transplant, the persistence of this hypertension may be, among others, by the use of immunosuppressants. A new category for non-dipper classification is described.

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Mendoza-Romo-Ramírez, M. A., García-Hernández, J. A., Rodríguez-Quilantán, F. J., Ávila-Infante, A., Bartolo-Sánchez, F. D., Silva-Ortiz, J. A., & Valdés-Méndez, J. A. (2021). Non-dipper effect in hypertense patients after renal transplantation by 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. Cirugia y Cirujanos (English Edition), 89(6), 769–775. https://doi.org/10.24875/CIRU.20001016

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