| Literature DB >> 23097665 |
Jochen Gille1, Hans-Jürgen Seyfarth, Stefan Gerlach, Michael Malcharek, Elke Czeslick, Armin Sablotzki.
Abstract
Pulmonary hypertension is a major reason for elevated perioperative morbidity and mortality, even in noncardiac surgical procedures. Patients should be thoroughly prepared for the intervention and allowed plenty of time for consideration. All specialty units involved in treatment should play a role in these preparations. After selecting each of the suitable individual anesthetic and surgical procedures, intraoperative management should focus on avoiding all circumstances that could contribute to exacerbating pulmonary hypertension (hypoxemia, hypercapnia, acidosis, hypothermia, hypervolemia, and insufficient anesthesia and analgesia). Due to possible induction of hypotonic blood circulation, intravenous vasodilators (milrinone, dobutamine, prostacyclin, Na-nitroprusside, and nitroglycerine) should be administered with the greatest care. A method of treating elevations in pulmonary pressure with selective pulmonary vasodilation by inhalation should be available intraoperatively (iloprost, nitrogen monoxide, prostacyclin, and milrinone) in addition to invasive hemodynamic monitoring. During the postoperative phase, patients must be monitored continuously and receive sufficient analgesic therapy over an adequate period of time. All in all, perioperative management of patients with pulmonary hypertension presents an interdisciplinary challenge that requires the adequate involvement of anesthetists, surgeons, pulmonologists, and cardiologists alike.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23097665 PMCID: PMC3477529 DOI: 10.1155/2012/356982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anesthesiol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6962
Classification of pulmonary hypertension (Dana-point [7]).
| (1) Pulmonary artery hypertension | |
| (1.1) Idiopathic (IPAH) | |
| (1.2) Hereditary (HPAH)—BMPR2, ALK-1, endoglin | |
| (1.3) Drug and toxin induced | |
| (1.4) Associated pulmonary artery hypertension (APAH) | |
| (1.4.1) Connective tissue disorders | |
| (1.4.2) HIV infection | |
| (1.4.3) Portal hypertension | |
| (1.4.4) Congenital heart diseases | |
| (1.4.5) Schistosomiasis | |
| (1.4.6) Chronic hemolytic anemia | |
| (1.4.7) Persistent newborn pulmonary hypertension | |
| (1.5) Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease and/or pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis (PCH) | |
| (2) Pulmonary hypertension caused by left-heart disease | |
| (2.1) Systolic dysfunction | |
| (2.2) Diastolic dysfunction | |
| (2.3) Valve disease | |
| (3) Pulmonary hypertension secondary to pulmonary diseases and/or hypoxemia | |
| (3.1) Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease | |
| (3.2) Interstitial pulmonary disease | |
| (3.3) Other pulmonary diseases with mixed restrictive and obstructive patterns | |
| (3.4) Sleep-disordered breathing | |
| (3.5) Alveolar hypoventilation disorders | |
| (3.6) Chronic high-altitude exposure | |
| (3.7) Developmental abnormalities | |
| (4) Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) | |
| (5) Pulmonary hypertension with unclear or multifactorial mechanisms | |
| (5.1) Hematological disorders: myeloproliferative and splenectomy | |
| (5.2) Systemic disorders: sarcoidosis, pulmonary Langerhans cell histiocytosis, lymphangioleiomyomatosis, neurofibromatosis, and vasculitis | |
| (5.3) Metabolic disorders: glycogen storage disease, Gaucher's disease, and thyroid disorders | |
| (5.4) Others: tumoral obstruction, fibrous mediastinitis, and chronic renal failure with dialysis |
Hemodynamic characteristics in patients with pulmonary hypertension (mod. [8]).
| Definition | Characteristics | Etiology |
|---|---|---|
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| PAPm ≥ 25 mmHg | all |
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| CO normal or reduced | |
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PAPm ≥ 25 mmHg |
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| PAPm ≥ 25 mmHg | ||
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| PCWP > 15 mmHg |
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| CO normal or reduced | ||
| (a) passive | TPG ≤ 12 mmHg | |
| (b) reactive | TPG > 12 mmHg |
PAPm: mean pulmonary arterial pressure; CO: cardiac output; PCWP: pulmonary capillary wedge pressure; TPG: transpulmonary gradient (= PAPm − PCWP).
Figure 1Development of right-ventricular failure in patients with pulmonary hypertension.
Clinical findings in patients with pulmonary hypertension (mod. [8]).
| (i) Dyspnea (during stress/at rest)/cyanosis |
| (ii) Fatigue |
| (iii) Dizziness |
| (iv) Synkope |
| (v) Thoracic pain |
| (vi) Palpitations |
| (vii) Orthopnea |
| (viii) Cough |
| (ix) Croakiness |
| (x) Abdominal tension |
| (xi) Peripheral Edema/Ascites |
| (xii) Hepatomegaly |
Therapy of pulmonary hypertension: approved drugs (mod. [8]).
| Drug | Dosage | Side effect | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bosentan | Endothelin receptor antagonist | 2 × 62,5–125 mg/d po | Increase of liver enzymes edema |
| Ambrisentan | Selective endothelin-A | 1 × 5–10 mg/d po | Increase of liver enzymes |
| Sildenafil | PDE-5 inhibitor | 3 × 20 mg/d po | Reflux esophagitis |
| Tadalafil | PDE-5 inhibitor | 1 × 40 mg/d po | Headache and pain in the limbs |
| Iloprost | Prostacyclin-analog | 6–9 × 2,5/5 | Hypotension and flush |
| Treprostinil | Prostacyclin-analog | 1,25–22,5 ng/kg/min s.c. | Local pain |
Figure 2Clinical findings in a patient with chronic right-heart insufficiency and severe pulmonary hypertension.
Functional classification of pulmonary hypertension (WHO 1998) [28].
| Class I | Patients with pulmonary hypertension but without resulting limitation of physical activity. Ordinary physical activity does not cause dyspnea or fatigue, chest pain or near syncope. |
| Class II | Patients with pulmonary hypertension resulting in slight limitation of physical activity. They are comfortable at rest. Ordinary physical activity causes undue dyspnea or fatigue, chest pain or near syncope. |
| Class III | Patients with pulmonary hypertension resulting in marked limitation of physical activity. They are comfortable at rest. Less than ordinary physical activity causes undue dyspnea or fatigue, chest pain or near syncope. |
| Class IV | Patients with pulmonary hypertension with inability to carry out any physical activity without symptoms. These patients manifest signs of right-heart failure. Dyspnea and/or fatigue may even be present at rest. |
ECG-findings in chronic right-heart failure.
| (i) Sinus tachycardia | |
| (ii) Vertical/right type | |
| (iii) Positive Sokolow-Lyon index for right-ventricular hypertrophy | |
| (iv) p-pulmonalis | |
| (v) SI/SII/SIII-Type and SI/QIII-Type | |
| (vi) Incomplete or complete right bundle branch block | |
| (vii) Right-ventricular repolarization disorder |
Figure 3ECG in a patient with severe pulmonary hypertension.
Right-heart catheterization: parameters for evaluation.
| (i) Pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP; systolic, diastolic, and mean) |
| (ii) Pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) |
| (iii) Right-ventricular pressure (RVP) |
| (iv) Right-atrial pressure (RAP) |
| (v) Cardiac output (CO); cardiac index (CI) |
| (vi) Oxygen saturation (systemic arterial; pulmonary arterial) |
| (vii) Pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) |
Intraoperative monitoring: recommendation for patients with PH.
| (i) Basic monitoring |
| (a) ECG |
| (b) SaO2 |
| (c) End-expiratory CO2 |
| (d) Invasive blood pressure |
| (e) Optional: stroke volume variation (SVV) |
| (ii) Extended monitoring |
| (a) Pulmonary arterial catheter |
| (b) Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) |
| (c) ScvO2 |
Authors recommendations for the human and structural and technical requirements for the perioperative management of patients with severe pulmonary hypertension.
| (i) Established cooperation with cardiologists and pulmonologists |
| (ii) Access to specific medication for the treatment of pulmonary hypertension |
| (iii) Experiences in all procedures of general and regional anesthesia |
| (iv) Experiences in dealing with pulmonary arterial catheterization and the use of inhaled drugs for selective pulmonary vasodilation |
| (v) Intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography |
| (vi) Hemodynamic monitoring in critical care |
| (vii) Specific educational program for “pulmonary hypertension” |
| (viii) Consultants with special experiences in the treatment of pulmonary hypertension |
| (ix) Regular pain visits and/or pain nurses for the perioperative pain therapy |
Figure 4Assembly instruction for the integration of an ultrasonic nebulizer (Multisonic) in the ventilatory circuit. Intraoperative selective pulmonary vasodilation with inhaled iloprost.
Figure 5Mechanisms of acute right-heart failure.
Intraoperative “basic treatment” to avoid an increase of pulmonary arterial pressure (mod. [30, 31, 39, 48, 59]).
| (i) “luxury” oxygenation with inspiratory FiO2 0,6–1,0 | |
| (ii) Moderate hyperventilation (goal: PaCO2 30–35 mmHg) | |
| (iii) Avoidance of metabolic acidosis (pH > 7,4) | |
| (iv) Recruitment maneuver to avoid ventilation/perfusion mismatch | |
| (v) Low-tidal-volume ventilation to avoid overinflation of aveoli (goal: 6–8 mL/kg ideal body weight) | |
| (vii) Temperature management to maintain body temperature of 36-37°C | |
| (viii) “goal-directed” fluid and volume therapy with hemodynamic monitoring |
Specific interventions for therapy of intra- and/or postoperative increase of pulmonary arterial pressure (mod. [30, 31, 38, 39, 48, 59, 60]).
| Reduction of right-ventricular afterload: | |
|---|---|
| Intravenous vasodilation | |
| (1) Milrinone | 50 |
| (2) Dobutamine | 2–5 |
| (3) Prostacyclin | 4–10 ng/kgBW/min continuously |
| (4) Na-nitruprusside | 0,2–0,3 |
| (5) Nitroglycerine | 2–10 |
| Pulmonary-selective inhalative vasodilatation | |
| (1) Iloprost | 5–10 |
| (2) Nitrogen monoxide | 0,5–20 ppm continuously |
| (3) Prostacyclin | 30–40 ng/kgBW/min continuously |
| (4) Milrinone | 2 mg (−5 mg) for 10–15 min (diluted in 10–15 mL NaCl0,9%) |
Figure 6Preoperative inhalation of iloprost in spontaneous ventilation.