| Literature DB >> 30697278 |
Pratishtha Mehra1, Vimal Mehta1, Rishi Sukhija2, Anjan K Sinha3, Mohit Gupta1, M P Girish1, Wilbert S Aronow4.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 30697278 PMCID: PMC6348356 DOI: 10.5114/aoms.2017.68938
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Med Sci ISSN: 1734-1922 Impact factor: 3.318
Updated clinical classification of pulmonary hypertension [1]
| 1.1 | Idiopathic PAH |
| 1.2 | Heritable PAH |
| 1.2.1 | BMPR2 |
| 1.2.2 | ALK-1, ENG, SMAD9, CAV1, KCNK3 |
| 1.2.3 | Unknown |
| 1.3 | Drug and toxin induced |
| 1.4 | Associated with: |
| 1.4.1 | Connective tissue disease |
| 1.4.2 | HIV infection |
| 1.4.3 | Portal hypertension |
| 1.4.4 | Congenital heart disease |
| 1.4.5 | Schistosomiasis |
| 1’ | Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease and/or pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis |
| 1’’ | Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN) |
| 2.1 | Left ventricular systolic dysfunction |
| 2.2 | Left ventricular diastolic dysfunction |
| 2.3 | Valvular disease |
| 2.4 | Congenital/acquired left heart inflow/outflow tract obstruction and congenital cardiomyopathies |
| 3.1 | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease |
| 3.2 | Interstitial lung disease |
| 3.3 | Other pulmonary diseases with mixed restrictive and obstructive pattern |
| 3.4 | Sleep-disordered breathing |
| 3.5 | Alveolar hypoventilation disorders |
| 3.6 | Chronic exposure to high altitude |
| 3.7 | Developmental lung diseases |
| 5.1 | Hematologic disorders: chronic hemolytic anemia, myeloproliferative disorders, splenectomy |
| 5.2 | Systemic disorders: sarcoidosis, pulmonary histiocytosis, lymphangioleiomyomatosis |
| 5.3 | Metabolic disorders: glycogen storage diseases, Gaucher disease, thyroid disorders |
| 5.4 | Others: tumoral obstruction, fibrosing mediastinitis, chronic renal failure, |
PAH – pulmonary arterial hypertension, BMPR2 – bone morphogenetic protein receptor 2, HIV – human immunodeficiency virus, PH – pulmonary hypertension.
Prevalence of pulmonary hypertension in left heart disease
| S. No. | Left sided heart disease | Prevalence of PH (%) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | LV systolic dysfunction [ | 60 |
| 2 | LV diastolic dysfunction (PASP > 35 mm Hg) [ | 83 |
| 3 | Mitral stenosis (PASP ≥ 50 mm Hg) [ | 38 |
| 4 | Mitral regurgitation (PASP > 50 mm Hg) [ | 23 |
| 5 | Aortic stenosis (PASP > 50 mm Hg) [ | 29 |
| 6 | Aortic regurgitation (PASP ≥ 60 mm Hg) [ | 16 |
Note: The above percentages are only approximate values based on the quoted series. It must be emphasized that the occurrence of PH is dependent on severity and duration of left heart disease such that the PH is more common in patients in advanced stages of underlying left heart disease. Further, it is not necessary that all patients with similar severity of particular left heart disease will develop PH or if PH is present it is of equal severity. Nevertheless, the presence and severity of PH signifies poor prognosis. PASP – pulmonary arterial systolic pressure, LV – left ventricular.
Figure 1Hemodynamic definition of pulmonary hypertension
TPG = mPAP – mPCWP, DPG = dPAP – mPCWP, DPG – diastolic pulmonary gradient, dPAP – diastolic pulmonary artery pressure, TPG – transpulmonary gradient, mPAP – mean pulmonary arterial pressure, mPCWP – mean pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, PH – pulmonary hypertension, PVR – pulmonary vascular resistance, WU – Wood units.
Figure 2Pathophysiology of pulmonary hypertension and right heart failure in left heart disease
Echocardiographic parameters for assessment of right ventricle [43–47]
| Method | Normal range | Abnormal value | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inferior vena cava diameter and inspiratory collapse | ≤ 21 mm, >> 50% inspiratory collapse with a sniff suggests normal RA pressure | > 21 mm | Decreased inspiratory collapse with a sniff < 50% suggests high RA pressure (10–20 mm Hg) |
| Right atrial area (end-systole) | 14–15 cm2 | > 18 cm2 | RA enlargement is an indirect measure of RV dysfunction and suggests chronic RA remodeling |
| RV basal diameter | 25–41 mm | > 41 mm | Linear dimension of basal RV in 4 chamber view measured in basal one-third of RV inflow at end-diastole |
| RV mid-cavity diameter | 19–35 mm | > 35 mm | Transverse RV diameter in middle third of RV inflow |
| RV base-to-apex diameter | 59–83 mm | > 83 mm | RV foreshortening to be avoided |
| RV/LV basal diameter ratio | < 1 | > 1.1 | Suggests RV dilatation |
| RV free wall thickness | 1–5 mm | > 5 mm | True thickness avoiding trabeculations. Measured from subcostal and parasternal long-axis views |
| Tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion | 20 ±2.8 mm | < 17 mm | Measure of RV longitudinal function. By M-mode echo directed at lateral tricuspid annulus in 4 chamber view |
| RV fractional area change | 47–51% | < 35% | Measured in 4 chamber view as change in RV area from diastole to systole |
| TVI- S’ wave velocity | 14–15 cm/s | < 9.5 cm/s | Lateral tricuspid annular systolic tissue velocity |
| RV MPI | 0.28 ±0.04 | > 0.40 | Not limited by RV geometry |
| RVOT acceleration time (AT) | > 110 ms | < 105 ms and/or midsystolic notching | Inverse relationship between AT and mean PAP |
| Interventricular septum | Normally IV septum bows towards RV | Flattening/bowing of IV septum towards LV | Suggestive of increased RV pressures |
| LV eccentricity index in systole or diastole | 1 | > 1.1 | LV antero-posterior to septo-lateral diameters ratio just above papillary muscles in short-axis |
| Early diastolic pulmonary regurgitant velocity | < 1 m/s | > 1 m/s | Estimates mean PAP |
| Late diastolic pulmonary regurgitant velocity | < 1 m/s | > 1 m/s | Estimates pulmonary artery end-diastolic pressure |
| Pulmonary artery diameter | – | > 25 mm | Suggests pulmonary artery dilatation |
IV – interventricular, LV – left ventricle, PAP – pulmonary artery pressure, RA – right atrium, RV – right ventricle, RVOT – right ventricular outflow tract, MPI – myocardial performance index, TVI-S – tricuspid velocity index systolic.
Figure 3Echocardiography of patient in Fig. 3 of rheumatic heart disease with severe mitral stenosis in normal sinus rhythm showing: A – thickened mitral leaflets with diastolic doming of anterior mitral leaflet with marked left atrial dilatation, B – mitral valve in short-axis in diastole showing fused medial and lateral commissures with area of 0.78 cm2 by planimetry, C – measurement of mean transmitral gradient of 11 mm Hg, D – dilated left atrium, right atrium and right ventricle, E – CW Doppler of TR jet showing peak velocity of 5.1 m/s with calculated RVSP of 104 mm Hg plus right atrial pressure, F – end-diastolic velocity of pulmonary regurgitation signal of 3 m/s with calculated pulmonary artery end diastolic pressure of 36 mm Hg plus right atrial pressure
Role of exercise in evaluation of valvular disease
| Role of exercise in mitral stenosis | Role of exercise in aortic stenosis | Role of exercise in primary mitral regurgitation (MR) | Role of exercise in secondary mitral regurgitation |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Exercise results in increase in LA pressure, transmitral mean pressure gradient and systolic PAP [ Patients with low LA compliance are more symptomatic and show exaggerated increase in PAP with exercise. Steep E wave downslope is recorded in such patients on continuous wave Doppler trace on mitral valve interrogation resulting in overestimation of calculated valve area by pressure half-time method [ In asymptomatic patients exercise induced increase in RVSP to > 60 mm Hg should prompt reassessment of symptoms [ Increase in systolic PAP ≥ 90% during exercise stress test is associated with development of dyspnea in asymptomatic MS patients and increased need for mitral valve intervention during follow up [ |
Severe AS patients with resting elevated PAP (> 50 mm Hg) are often symptomatic and have poor outcome [ Exercise stress echocardiography is useful in unmasking patients with asymptomatic severe AS who are at high risk of future cardiac events [ Besides poor prognostic markers like increase of mean pressure gradient increase of > 20 mm Hg and lack of contractile reserve on exercise, exercise PH has incremental value in identifying high-risk asymptomatic AS patients [ Exercise PH gives additional prognostic information on top of exercise induced increase in aortic trans-valvular gradient Exercise stress echocardiography induced PH (systolic PAP > 60 mm Hg) is more common than resting PH in asymptomatic, adversely affecting the prognosis [ In asymptomatic severe AS patients exercise stress echocardiography induced PH is a predictor of development of symptoms, occurrence of resting PH and doubling of risk of cardiac events [ |
Exercise PH (> 60 mm Hg) is frequent (46% patients) in asymptomatic moderate and severe degenerative MR patients and is associated with early development of symptoms [ Exercise induced increase in MR severity is a strong predictor of exercise PH [ Exercise PH is an independent predictor of lower event-free survival and need for mitral valve surgery Pre-operative exercise PH (SPAP > 60 mm Hg) is associated with significantly reduced post operative event free survival including atrial fibrillation, stroke, cardiac-related hospitalization or death [ Exercise echo is not recommended in symptomatic patients and in those with reduced LVEF (< 60%) [ Mitral valve surgery is a Class IIb indication in asymptomatic patients with exercise PH ≥ 60 mm Hg (ESC guidelines) [ |
Although ERO of MR ≥ 20 mm2 at rest is a predictor of cardiac death, evaluation of ischemic MR at rest in CHF underestimates the severity of MR and its prognostic implications [ Exercise induced increase in ERO of MR of ≥ 13 mm2 and systolic PAP increase of 21 mm Hg are predictors of future CHF hospitalization and cardiac mortality [ The increase in LV filling pressures during exercise in CHF patients is transmitted to the pulmonary vasculature resulting in rise of systolic PAP. Exercise induced increase in MR is associated with increase in pulmonary artery pressure Exercise induced increase in systolic PAP can occur in secondary MR associated with both LV systolic and diastolic dysfunction [ |
AS – aortic stenosis, CHF – chronic congestive heart failure, ERO – effective regurgitant orifice, LA – left atrium, LV – left ventricle, LVEF – left ventricular ejection fraction, MS – mitral stenosis, MR – mitral regurgitation, PAP – pulmonary artery pressure, PH – pulmonary hypertension, RV – right ventricle.