Literature DB >> 27576320

A new method to estimate pulmonary vascular resistance using diastolic pulmonary artery-right ventricular pressure gradients derived from continuous-wave Doppler velocity measurements of pulmonary regurgitation.

Sanae Kaga1,2, Taisei Mikami3, Michito Murayama4, Kazunori Okada1, Nobuo Masauzi1, Masahiro Nakabachi5, Hisao Nishino5, Shinobu Yokoyama5, Mutsumi Nishida5, Taichi Hayashi2, Daisuke Murai2, Hiroyuki Iwano2, Mamoru Sakakibara2, Satoshi Yamada2, Hiroyuki Tsutsui2.   

Abstract

Pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) is an important hemodynamic parameter in patients with heart failure, especially when the pulmonary arterial pressure is lower due to reduced stroke volume. Several echocardiographic methods to estimate PVR have been proposed, but their applications in patients with organic left-sided heart diseases have been limited. The aim of the present study was to examine the usefulness of our new method to estimate PVR (PVRPR) based on the continuous-wave Doppler velocity measurements of pulmonary regurgitation in these patients. In 43 patients who underwent right heart catheterization, PVRPR was calculated as the difference between the Doppler-derived early- and end-diastolic pulmonary artery (PA)-right ventricular (RV) pressure gradients divided by the cardiac output measured in the left ventricular outflow tract by echocardiography. The PVRPR correlated well with invasive PVR (PVRCATH) (r = 0.81, p < 0.001) without any fixed bias in Bland-Altman analysis. The conventional echocardiographic PVRs showed inadequate correlations with PVRCATH, or a obvious overestimation of PVRCATH. In the receiver operating characteristic analyses to determine the patients with abnormal elevation of PVRCATH (>3 Wood units, WU), the area under the curve was the greatest for PVRPR (0.964) compared to the conventional PVRs (0.649-0.839). PVRPR had 83 % sensitivity and 100 % specificity at the optimal cut-off value of 3.10 WU in identifying patients with PVRCATH >3 WU. Our simple and theoretical PVRPR is useful for the noninvasive estimation of PVR.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Echocardiography; Left heart failure; Pulmonary regurgitation; Pulmonary vascular resistance

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27576320     DOI: 10.1007/s10554-016-0965-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging        ISSN: 1569-5794            Impact factor:   2.357


  19 in total

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Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2001-06-01       Impact factor: 24.094

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Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1986-02-08       Impact factor: 79.321

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Journal:  Circulation       Date:  1982-09       Impact factor: 29.690

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Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1984-01-01       Impact factor: 2.778

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Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2003-03-19       Impact factor: 24.094

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  2 in total

1.  Simple and noninvasive method to estimate right ventricular operating stiffness based on echocardiographic pulmonary regurgitant velocity and tricuspid annular plane movement measurements during atrial contraction.

Authors:  Michito Murayama; Kazunori Okada; Sanae Kaga; Hiroyuki Iwano; Shingo Tsujinaga; Miwa Sarashina; Masahiro Nakabachi; Shinobu Yokoyama; Hisao Nishino; Mutsumi Nishida; Hitoshi Shibuya; Nobuo Masauzi; Toshihisa Anzai; Taisei Mikami
Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2019-06-05       Impact factor: 2.357

2.  A simpler noninvasive method of predicting markedly elevated pulmonary vascular resistance in patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension.

Authors:  Ya-Nan Zhai; Ai-Li Li; Xin-Cao Tao; Wan-Mu Xie; Qian Gao; Yu Zhang; Ai-Hong Chen; Jie-Ping Lei; Zhen-Guo Zhai
Journal:  Pulm Circ       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 2.886

  2 in total

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