P
Peter N. Van Buren
Researcher at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Publications - 35
Citations - 928
Peter N. Van Buren is an academic researcher from University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Hemodialysis. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 32 publications receiving 754 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter N. Van Buren include University of Texas at Dallas & University of Texas at Austin.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Hypertension in diabetic nephropathy: epidemiology, mechanisms, and management.
TL;DR: An updated review of the mechanisms involved in hypertension in patients with diabetic nephropathy is presented and the past clinical trials using single agents as therapeutics and the more recent trials involving novel drugs or drug combinations used to treat patients are reviewed.
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Intradialytic hypertension and the association with interdialytic ambulatory blood pressure
TL;DR: Time-integrated BP burden as measured by 44-hour ambulatory BP is higher in hemodialysis patients with intradialytic hypertension than those without intradialsized hypertension.
Journal ArticleDOI
Probing the Mechanisms of Intradialytic Hypertension: A Pilot Study Targeting Endothelial Cell Dysfunction
Jula K. Inrig,Jula K. Inrig,Peter N. Van Buren,Catherine Kim,Wanpen Vongpatanasin,Thomas J. Povsic,Robert D. Toto +6 more
TL;DR: Targeting endothelial cell dysfunction with carvedilol was associated with modest improvements in endothelial function, improved intradialytic and interdialytic BP, and reduced frequency of intradiaytic hypertension.
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Current update in the management of diabetic nephropathy.
TL;DR: This review article addresses some of the well-established principles regarding the progression and accepted management of diabetic nephropathy and includes current updates on the most recent clinical research trials exploring novel therapeutics in this field.
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Chronic kidney disease, cerebral blood flow, and white matter volume in hypertensive adults.
Manjula Kurella Tamura,Nicholas M. Pajewski,R. Nick Bryan,Daniel E. Weiner,Matthew Diamond,Peter N. Van Buren,Addison A. Taylor,Srinivasan Beddhu,Clive Rosendorff,Hesamoddin Jahanian,Greg Zaharchuk +10 more
TL;DR: Among nondiabetic hypertensive adults, reduced eGFR was associated with higher CBF and higher UACR was associatedWith larger abnormal WMV and in adjusted analyses, there was a linear independent association between UACr and larger abnormalWMV, but not with CBF.