| Literature DB >> 28929090 |
Abstract
There is a growing awareness of the role that increased pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) plays in many pathologies; therefore, assessment of pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) is an increasingly requested investigation in the critical care environment. This article will go through the basic concepts regarding PAP and PVR, then will go on to outline the various echocardiographic parameters which are used to assess them. Finally, an outline of how to undertake this assessment will be presented.Entities:
Keywords: echocardiography; neonatology; pediatrics; pulmonary hypertension; pulmonary vascular resistance
Year: 2017 PMID: 28929090 PMCID: PMC5591613 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Important variables in the assessment of pulmonary vascular resistance.
| Variable | Units of measurement |
|---|---|
| Flow | L/min (indexed to body surface area as L/min/m2) notation: “Q” |
| Resistance | Woods unit·m2 (WU·m2) |
| Pressure | Torr (mmHg) |
Quantification of PAH in adults.
| Mean pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) | (≈Systolic PAP) | Degree of PAH |
|---|---|---|
| <25 mmHg | <40 mmHg | Normal |
| 25–40 mmHg | 40–60 mmHg | Mild |
| 41–55 mmHg | 60–90 mmHg | Moderate |
| >55 mmHg | >90 mmHg | Severe |
.
Quantification of PAH in children.
| Systolic PA pressure/systemic systolic BP | Degree of PAH |
|---|---|
| <1/3 | Normal |
| 1/3–2/3 | Mild |
| 2/3–1 | Moderate |
| >1 | Severe |
.
Figure 1(A) A good tricuspid regurgitation jet envelope, suitable for analysis (note incomplete envelope on second beat due to respiratory motion). (B) An incomplete tricuspid regurgitation jet envelope, which will underestimate right ventricular systolic pressure.
Figure 2(A) A pulmonary regurgitation envelope with normal pulmonary artery pressure. (B) A pulmonary regurgitation envelope in a patient with very high pulmonary artery pressure.
Figure 3(A) Short axis view of the left ventricle in end systole. D1 and D2 represent the measurements taken to measure the end systolic eccentricity index. This shows a patient with normal right ventricular systolic pressure. (B) Flattened septum with increased end systolic eccentricity index with moderately increased right ventricular systolic pressure. (C) Short axis view with severely increased right ventricular systolic pressure. Note RV dilatation.
Categorisation of RV pressure based on EIs (11).
| End systolic eccentricity index | RV pressure |
|---|---|
| <1.15 | Normal/mildly increased |
| 1.15–1.29 | Moderately increased |
| ≥1.3 | Severely increased |
Evaluation of PVR in the presence of a large shunt.
| Shunt direction on echo | Clinical findings | Pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) vs SVR |
|---|---|---|
| Left-to-right | Normal saturations Respiratory distress Pulmonary congestion Hepatomegaly Heart failure | PVR < SVR |
| No net shunt (bidirectional) | Normal/variable saturations (may have labile PVR) Asymptomatic from shunt | PVR ≈ SVR |
| Right-to-left shunt | Low saturations (if PDA, then may have differential upper/lower limb saturations) Difficult to oxygenate Asymptomatic from shunt | PVR > SVR |
Evaluation of pulmonary artery pressure based on PDA spectral Doppler pattern.
| Spectral Doppler trace (blue = right-to-left flow, red = left-to-right flow) | Comment |
|---|---|
Right-to-left shunt in systole and diastole Pathological trace—indicates very elevated pulmonary artery pressure Likely to have differential upper and lower limb saturations | |
Right-to-left shunt in systole, no shunt in diastole Indicates significantly elevated pulmonary artery pressure | |
Right-to-left shunt in systole, left-to-right shunt in diastole Systolic pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) > systolic BP Normal trace in newborns [physiologically high pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR)] May reflect increased PVR or large shunt | |
Shunt predominantly left-to-right, some right-to-left flow in systole Transitional trace in newborn, indicating falling PVR Indicates elevated systolic PAP | |
Continuous left-to-right shunt Systolic and diastolic PAP < systolic and diastolic systemic BP Peak velocity will reflect difference between systolic BP and systolic PAP |
Figure 4Flowchart demonstrating approach to evaluating pulmonary hypertension.