Angermann C E, Spes C H, Willems S, Dominiak P, Kemkes B M, Theisen K
Medizinische Klinik Innenstadt.
Z Kardiol. 1989 Apr;78(4):228-35.
The de novo hypertension, which develops in most cardiac transplant recipients within the first postoperative months, is multicausal, though toxic side-effects of cyclosporin A seem to play a key role. In order to analyze the circadian behavior of arterial blood pressure and heart rate after cardiac transplantation (HTX) and to evaluate the effect of an antihypertensive regimen on these parameters, 24-h noninvasive ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate monitoring was performed in 10 hypertensive cardiac transplant recipients on cyclosporin A (mean age 42.3 +/- 11.2 years, 14.3 +/- 8.3 months after HTX) before antihypertensive therapy and after introduction of an antihypertensive regimen with the ACE-inhibitor enalapril plus furosemide alone or combined with verapamil. The study demonstrated a complete loss of the usual nocturnal decline in blood pressure in cardiac transplant recipients (mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure 149 +/- 8 and 102 +/- 7 mm Hg during daytime and 152 +/- 8 and 104 +/- 9 mmHg at night). Antihypertensive therapy lowered the blood pressure level effectively, but did not influence the circadian pattern (mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure 121 +/- 8 and 81 +/- 4 mmHg during daytime and 121 +/- 9 and 83 +/- 3 mmHg at night, all p less than or equal to 0.001). Heart rate, in contrast, showed a significant, though in comparison to normal, a blunted decrease at night (mean heart rate 94 +/- 6 beats per min during daytime and 84 +/- 8 beats per min at night, p less than or equal to 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)