Renovascular Disease (RVD)
KIDNEY BLOOD FLOW & VASCULAR CARE
Renovascular disease happens when narrowed or blocked arteries reduce blood flow to the kidneys. It may contribute to difficult-to-control blood pressure, kidney function changes, or fluid-related symptoms that need vascular evaluation.
- Reduced blood flow to the kidneys
- Can affect blood pressure control
- May change kidney function
- Evaluation is imaging-based
Evaluation & Next Steps
- Clear severity assessment and next steps
- Supportive care and recovery guidance
- Care across 4 Las Vegas locations
Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm
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Quick Summary
Key Takeaway: Renovascular disease can affect kidney function and blood pressure, especially when kidney arteries become narrowed by plaque or other vascular changes.
Evaluation focuses on symptoms, blood pressure history, kidney function, medication response, and imaging of the renal arteries. Treatment planning depends on severity, kidney health, overall vascular risk, and whether improving blood flow may help.
Overview
What is Renovascular Disease?
Renovascular disease refers to narrowing or blockage in the arteries that supply blood to the kidneys. The most common cause is plaque buildup, though other vessel conditions can also affect kidney blood flow.
Why Evaluation Matters
Reduced kidney blood flow can contribute to resistant high blood pressure, worsening kidney function, or fluid overload. Vascular evaluation helps determine whether monitoring, medication adjustment, or treatment planning is appropriate.
Symptoms
Renovascular disease may not cause obvious symptoms at first. Many signs are found through blood pressure changes, kidney lab results, or imaging.
Hard-to-Control Blood Pressure
Blood pressure may remain high despite multiple medications or become harder to manage over time.
Kidney Function Changes
Lab tests may show declining kidney function or changes after certain blood pressure medications.
Fluid or Breathing Symptoms
Some patients develop swelling, fluid retention, or sudden episodes of shortness of breath related to vascular and kidney strain.
Vascular Risk Clues
A history of PAD, smoking, diabetes, or artery disease elsewhere can raise concern for kidney artery narrowing.
Seek care now if…
Seek urgent care for severe shortness of breath, chest pain, stroke-like symptoms, very high blood pressure with symptoms, sudden weakness, confusion, or rapid swelling. These can signal a serious vascular or medical problem.
Causes & Risk Factors
Renovascular disease is most often related to artery narrowing that develops over time, but risk depends on overall vascular health, kidney health, and blood pressure history.
Common Causes
- Plaque buildup in kidney arteries
- Atherosclerosis elsewhere in the body
- Renal artery narrowing
- Less common vessel wall disorders
The cause and severity help guide whether care should focus on monitoring, medication optimization, vascular imaging, or treatment discussion.
Risk Factors
- High blood pressure
- Smoking history
- Diabetes
- High cholesterol
- Peripheral artery disease
- Coronary artery disease
- Older age
- Worsening kidney function
Diagnosis
Diagnosis focuses on identifying kidney artery narrowing, measuring how severe it is, and understanding how it may be affecting blood pressure or kidney function.
Typical Evaluation
- Review blood pressure history
- Review kidney function labs
- Check medication response
- Renal artery ultrasound
- CTA, MRA, or angiography when needed
What to Bring
- Recent blood pressure readings
- Kidney lab results
- Medication list
- Prior vascular imaging
- Cardiology or nephrology notes
Treatment Options
Treatment depends on the severity of kidney artery narrowing, kidney function, blood pressure control, symptoms, and overall vascular risk.
Related care may include blood pressure management, kidney function monitoring, vascular imaging review, nephrology coordination, and image-guided treatment discussion when appropriate.
Risk Management
- Control blood pressure
- Manage cholesterol and diabetes
- Stop smoking when applicable
- Review kidney-protective medications
Monitoring & Symptom Protection
- Track blood pressure trends
- Monitor kidney function labs
- Watch fluid retention
- Review medication changes
Vascular Treatment Options
- Renal artery imaging review
- Angioplasty discussion in select cases
- Stenting discussion when appropriate
- Care-team coordination
Follow-Up Evaluation
- Worsening kidney function
- Resistant blood pressure
- Sudden fluid overload
- New vascular symptoms
Recovery
Recovery and long-term management depend on whether renovascular disease is monitored medically or treated with a vascular procedure. Ongoing blood pressure and kidney monitoring remain important either way.
What Helps Most
- Consistent blood pressure tracking at home and during follow-up
- Medication review when kidney function or pressure changes
- Lab monitoring for kidney function trends
- Risk-factor control including smoking, cholesterol, and diabetes
- Coordinated care with vascular, kidney, and primary care teams
When to Follow Up
- Blood pressure remains high despite treatment
- Kidney function worsens on repeat labs
- Swelling or fluid symptoms increase
- Medication side effects or lab changes occur
- Imaging shows progression of renal artery narrowing
- Treatment options need to be reviewed
Frequently Asked Questions
Renovascular disease is reduced blood flow to the kidneys caused by narrowing or blockage in the renal arteries.
Yes. Narrowed kidney arteries can contribute to difficult-to-control blood pressure in some patients.
Evaluation may include blood pressure review, kidney function labs, renal artery ultrasound, CTA, MRA, or angiography when needed.
No. Many patients are managed with medication and monitoring. Procedures are considered based on severity, symptoms, kidney function, and expected benefit.
Severe shortness of breath, chest pain, stroke-like symptoms, very high blood pressure with symptoms, rapid swelling, or sudden weakness should be evaluated urgently.
In selected cases, angioplasty or stenting may be discussed, but candidacy depends on imaging, kidney function, symptoms, and overall health.
Locations
LVVIS West Side Consultation Office
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Consultations and vascular evaluations
LV2 Limb & Vascular Division
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care
LVVIS East Procedure Office
2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119
Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care
LVVIS West Side Surgical Center
6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Advanced vascular and interventional procedures