Persons with renovascular hypertension usually have severe, difficult-to-control high blood pressure. Elevated blood pressure measurements, repeated over time, confirm hypertension. Your doctor may hear a "whooshing" noise, or bruit, when placing a stethoscope over your belly area. Other signs of this disease include: - Episodes of heart failure (flash pulmonary edema)
- Rapid progression of kidney failure
- Acute kidney failure occurs when starting blood pressure medicines called ACE-I or ARBs
- Hypertension in an elderly patient whose blood pressure was previously well controlled
There may be signs of complications, such as: Your doctor may order blood tests to check your renin and aldosterone levels. Imaging tests may be done see if the kidney arteries have narrowed. They include: - Renal arteriography
- Doppler ultrasound of the renal arteries
- Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA)
- Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition renography
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