| Literature DB >> 26150101 |
Seiichiro Sakao1, Norbert F Voelkel2, Nobuhiro Tanabe3, Koichiro Tatsumi4.
Abstract
Given the difficulty of diagnosing early-stage pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) due to the lack of signs and symptoms, and the risk of an open lung biopsy, the precise pathological features of presymptomatic stage lung tissue remain unknown. It has been suggested that the maximum elevation of the mean pulmonary arterial pressure (P pa) is achieved during the early symptomatic stage, indicating that the elevation of the mean P pa is primarily driven by the pulmonary vascular tone and/or some degree of pulmonary vascular remodeling completed during this stage. Recently, the examination of a rat model of severe PAH suggested that the severe PAH may be primarily determined by the presence of intimal lesions and/or the vascular tone in the early stage. Human data seem to indicate that intimal lesions are essential for the severely increased pulmonary arterial blood pressure in the late stage of the disease.However, many questions remain. For instance, how does the pulmonary hemodynamics change during the course of the disease, and what drives the development of severe PAH? Although it is generally acknowledged that both pulmonary vascular remodeling and the vascular tone are important determinants of an elevated pulmonary arterial pressure, which is the root cause of the time-dependent progression of the disease? Here we review the recent histopathological concepts of PAH with respect to the progression of the lung vascular disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26150101 PMCID: PMC4493808 DOI: 10.1186/s12931-015-0246-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
The Heath and Edwards pathological grading method
| Potenially Reversable | |
|---|---|
| 1 | The medial thickness of the muscular pulmonary arteries and muscularization of the pulmonary arterioles without intimal alterations. |
| 2 | Together with the medial hypertrophy, intimal thickness with cell proliferation in the smaller muscular pulmonary arteries. |
| 3 | Intimal obstruction with concentric or eccentric masses of less cellular fibrous tissue in the arterioles and small muscular arteries. Large elastic arteries show atherosclerosis. |
| Usually Irreversible | |
| 4 | Progressive dilatation of the small arteries with plexiform lesions and muscle hypertrophy is less apparent. |
| 5 | Chronic dilatation of the small arteries with plexiform and angiomatoid lesions. |
| 6 | Necrotizing arteritis with thrombosis. |
(Heath D et al., Circulation 1958, 18: 533-547)
Fig. 1The determinants of severe pulmonary hypertension. The determinants of the elevation of the pulmonary arterial pressure in principle are vasoconstrictive reactivity which may be treatable with currently available vasodilator drugs. Fully developed and endstage disease may be characterized by complex vascular lesions and vasoconstriction that is refractory to treatment with presently available drugs. Ppa: pulmonary arterial perssure, PVR: pulmonary vascular resistance