Is greater than normal nocturnal heart rate in children with renal scars a predictor of reflux nephropathy?
GROUND: The existence of renal scars constitutes the major etiologic factor for the development of hypertension during childhood. Elevated blood pressure in this setting can be considered a secondary form of hypertension. Certain forms of secondary hypertension have been associated with a lower than normal nocturnal fall in blood pressure. Resting heart rate per se has recently been reported to be an independent predictor of risk for cardiovascular mortality irrespective of age and the presence or lack of hypertension. OBJECTIVE: To ascertain the responses of heart rate and blood pressure in normotensive children with renal scars without, however, proteinuria and renal failure. METHODS: Ten children with renal scars documented by a 99Tc dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan were subjected to ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. Ten age-matched and sex-matched healthy children served as the control group. Serum urea and creatinine levels, calculated rate of clearance of creatinine, micro