Background: Enlargement of renal size plays an important role in the development of hypertension in patients with autosomic dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) and normal renal function.
Methods: A 24h blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) and a renal echography have been performed in 37 patients with ADPKD and estimated glomerular filtration rate > 60 ml/min/1.73 m(2) to study the relationship between renal size and an altered blood pressure profile in prehypertension stages.
Results: 13 patients had normal blood pressure, 11 were diagnosed of masked hypertension, 4 had white coat hypertension and 9 had hypertension. We have found in the normotensive group with a dipper blood pressure profile a positive and statistically significant relationship between renal size and diastolic blood pressure variability.
Conclusions: ABPM helps to make an early diagnosis of hypertension and to identify those patients with masked hypertension. This study suggests a relationship between renal size and a blood pressure profile linked to a major cardiovascular risk in normotensive patients with ADPKD.