| Literature DB >> 29201914 |
Juan C Grignola1,2, Enric Domingo3,4.
Abstract
The role of the left ventricle in ICU patients with circulatory shock has long been considered. However, acute right ventricle (RV) dysfunction causes and aggravates many common critical diseases (acute respiratory distress syndrome, pulmonary embolism, acute myocardial infarction, and postoperative cardiac surgery). Several supportive therapies, including mechanical ventilation and fluid management, can make RV dysfunction worse, potentially exacerbating shock. We briefly review the epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and recommendations to guide management of acute RV dysfunction in ICU patients. Our aim is to clarify the complex effects of mechanical ventilation, fluid therapy, vasoactive drug infusions, and other therapies to resuscitate the critical patient optimally.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29201914 PMCID: PMC5671685 DOI: 10.1155/2017/8217105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Acute right ventricular dysfunction definition.
| Echo parameters | ECG signs | Biomarkers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| RV systolic function | RV dilation | ||
| TAPSE < 16 mm | ED RVD/LVD ratio > 0.9 | Complete RBBB | BNP > 100 pg/mL |
| S < 10 cm/sec | ED RVA/LVA ratio > 0.6 | Incomplete RBBB | NT-proBNP > 900 pg/mL |
| RV fractional area change < 35% | ED RVD > 42 mm (at the base) | Anteroseptal ST elevation | |
| RV ejection fraction < 45% | ED RVD > 33 mm (at the middle third of RV) | Anteroseptal ST depression | |
| Septal dyskinesia in the RV focused view | Anteroseptal T-wave inversion | ||
BNP: B-type natriuretic peptide; ED RVD/LVD ratio: end-diastolic RV diameter/LV diameter ratio; ED RVA/LVA ratio: end-diastolic RV area/LV area ratio; ED RVD: end-diastole RV diameter; NT-proBNP: N-terminal pro-BNP; S: pulsed Doppler S wave; TAPSE: tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion. At least one of the items must be present (echo parameters, ECG signs, and biomarkers) [30].
Figure 1Mechanisms of acute right ventricular dysfunction/failure (RVD/RVF). RV dysfunction begins with excessive increases in preload or afterload or injury that results in decreased contractility. RV ischemia and LV function impairment ensue a vicious cycle worsening hemodynamics and precipitate the transition to RVF. ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome; A-V: atrioventricular; CO: cardiac output; CVP: central venous pressure; MI: myocardial infarction; PE: pulmonary embolism; PFO: patent foramen oval; POCS: postoperative cardiac surgery; RAP: right atrial pressure; R → L: right-to-left; SV: stroke volume.
Cut-off values of RV structural and functional parameters and RV afterload assessment.
| RV structural parameters | RV functional parameters | RV afterload assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Basal RV diameter§ > 42 mm | RV fractional area change ≥ 35% | AccT < 100 msec |
| RV mid-diameter§ > 33 mm | MPI§ > 0.43 (pulsed Doppler); >0.54 (tissue Doppler) | Shape of doppler RV outflow tract envelope#: |
| RV EDD/LV EDD§ > 0.9 | TAPSE‡ < 16 mm | (i) No notch |
| RV/LV EDA§ > 0.6 | S wave° < 10 cm/s | (ii) Late notch |
| LV eccentricity index† > 1 | Peak RV free wall 2D strain | (iii) Midsystolic notch |
| McConnell's sign§ | ||
| RV wall thickness > 5 mm |
AccT: acceleration time of RV outflow tract flow; EDD: end-diastolic diameter; EDA: end-diastolic area; LV: left ventricle; RV: right ventricle; MPI: myocardial performance index (the ratio of the sum of isovolumic contraction plus relaxation time and ejection time intervals); S wave: peak velocity of systolic excursion at the lateral tricuspid annulus; TAPSE: tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion. #The presence and position of the systolic notching are related to the pulmonary dynamic afterload severity and RV dysfunction in patients referred for PH [31]. The presence of midsystolic notch is associated with the worst hemodynamic profile. §TTE: apical four-chamber; TEE: mid esophageal four-chamber; †TTE: parasternal midpapillary short axis; TEE: transgastric midpapillary short axis; °TTE: apical four-chamber; TEE: deep transgastric RV; RV-focused four-chamber view. ‡M-mode imaging at the lateral tricuspid valve plane.
Cardiovascular drugs for the management of acute RVF.
| Agent | Receptors agonism | Cardiovascular properties | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| D | V1 | CI | PVR | SVR | PVR/SVR | ↑ HR | |
| Vasopressors | ||||||||||
| | ++ | + | + | + | ++ | −/+ | + | |||
| Phenylephrine | ++ | − | ++ | + | + | − | ||||
| | + | + | +/− | +/− | ++ | − | − | |||
|
| ||||||||||
| Inotropes | ||||||||||
| Epinephrine | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | − | ++ | − | ++ | ||
| Dopamine | ||||||||||
| <5 | + | ++ | + | − | − | − | + | |||
| 5–10 | + | ++ | ++ | + | + | + | +/− | + | ||
| >10 | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | + | ++ | + | + | ||
| | ++ | + | ++ | − | − | − | + | |||
|
| ||||||||||
| Inodilators | ||||||||||
|
| ++ | − | − | − | +/− | |||||
| | ++ | − | − | − | + | |||||
α1, β1, and β2: adrenergic receptors; D: dopaminergic receptor; V1: vasopressin receptor; +: low-moderate affinity; ++: moderate-high affinity; AVP: arginine vasopressin; CI: cardiac index; PVR and SVR: pulmonary and systemic vascular resistance; HR: heart rate. Drugs in italic are the most preferable. −: neutral effect.
Figure 2Pulmonary vasodilators drugs, pathways, and mechanisms of action. AC: adenylate cyclase; sGC: soluble guanylate cyclase; ATP and GTP: adenosine and guanosine triphosphate, respectively; cAMP and cGMP: cyclic adenosine and guanosine monophosphate, respectively; inh: inhaled; i.v.: intravenous; NO: nitric oxide; −PDE: phosphodiesterase inhibitor; PK: protein kinase; ⊕: stimulator.
Differences between venoarterial and venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO).
| Venoarterial ECMO | Venovenous ECMO |
|---|---|
| Higher PaO2 is achieved | Lower PaO2 is achieved |
| Lower perfusion rates are needed | Higher perfusion rates are needed |
| Bypasses pulmonary circulation | Maintains pulmonary blood flow |
| Decreases pulmonary artery pressures | Elevates mixed venous PO2 |
| Provides cardiac support to assist systemic circulation | Does not provide cardiac support to assist systemic circulation |
| Requires arterial cannulation | Requires only venous cannulation |
Figure 3Schematic algorithm for selecting the appropriate extracorporeal life support in patients with refractory right ventricular failure. RA-LA: right atrial-left atrial; RVAD: right ventricular assist device; V-A: venoarterial; V-V: venovenous; ECMO: extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.
Mechanisms and targeted management in specific clinical scenarios of acute RV failure.
| Clinical scenario | Mechanism | Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Right ventricular infarct | Decreased RV contractility | Early myocardial reperfusion (percutaneous coronary intervention, systemic thrombolysis) |
| Pulmonary embolism | Increase RV afterload (mechanical obstruction & vasoconstriction) | Systemic anticoagulation, systemic or catheter-directed thrombolysis, embolectomy |
| Decompensated PAH | Increase RV afterload | Parenteral prostanoids (with or without inhaled pulmonary vasodilators |
| ARDS | Increasing RV afterload/decreasing RV contractility | Limiting VT and PEEP, avoiding hypoxia, hypercapnia, and acidosis |
| Noncardiac surgery | Acute PH, decreasing RV contractility (RV infarct) | Pulmonary vasodilators, myocardial reperfusion, inotropic drugs |
| Cardiac surgery | Volume overload, myocardial ischaemia, preexisting RVD, arrhythmias | Diuretics, inotropic drugs, cardioversion, antiarrhythmic drugs |
ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome; PAH: pulmonary arterial hypertension; RVD: right ventricular dysfunction.