Residual renal function and effect of low-sodium solution on blood pressure in peritoneal dialysis patients

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Abstract

Background: Residual renal function (RRF) affects sodium and fluid balance. The aim of this analysis was to examine the impact of RRF on the effect of a sodium-reduced peritoneal dialysis fluid (PDF) on blood pressure (BP). ♦ Methods: This is a post-hoc analysis of a prospective, randomized, controlled double-blind clinical trial with 82 patients on continuous ambulatory PD (CAPD) treated with a low-sodium (125 mmol/L Na) or a standard-sodium (134 mmol/L Na) PDF. Subgroups according to glomerular filtration rate (GFR) at baseline (≤ / > 6 mL/min/1.73 m2) were analyzed for BP and antihypertensive medication. ♦ Results: In the low-GFR group on low-sodium PDF (N = 26), systolic BP was reduced from 152 ± 24 mmHg at baseline to 137 ± 21 mmHg at week 12, diastolic BP from 90 ± 16 mmHg to 83 ± 11 mmHg. In the low-GFR group on standard-sodium PDF and in the high-GFR group on both PDF types, only minor changes were observed. For the low-GFR subgroup, the confounder-adjusted mean study group difference in systolic BP at week 12 between low-sodium and standard-sodium PDF was −16.9 (95% confidence interval [CI] −27.2 to −6.6) mmHg, for diastolic BP, it was −7.0 (95% CI −12.6 to −1.4) mmHg. In both GFR subgroups, more patients had a reduced daily dose of antihypertensive medication and fewer patients an increased daily dose in the low-sodium compared with the standard-sodium group at week 12. ♦ Conclusions: The reduction of BP with a sodium-reduced PDF seems to be more effective in patients with no or low RRF than in patients with residual capacity of renal sodium and fluid control.

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APA

Rutkowski, B., Tam, P., van der Sande, F. M., Vychytil, A., Schwenger, V., Klein, G., … Gauly, A. (2019). Residual renal function and effect of low-sodium solution on blood pressure in peritoneal dialysis patients. Peritoneal Dialysis International, 39(4), 335–343. https://doi.org/10.3747/pdi.2018.00120

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