Literature DB >> 31771997

Noninvasive evaluation of pulmonary artery pressure during exercise: the importance of right atrial hypertension.

Masaru Obokata1, Garvan C Kane1, Hidemi Sorimachi1, Yogesh N V Reddy1, Thomas P Olson1, Alexander C Egbe1, Vojtech Melenovsky2, Barry A Borlaug3.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Identification of elevated pulmonary artery pressures during exercise has important diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic implications. Stress echocardiography is frequently used to estimate pulmonary artery pressures during exercise testing, but data supporting this practice are limited. This study examined the accuracy of Doppler echocardiography for the estimation of pulmonary artery pressures at rest and during exercise.
METHODS: Simultaneous cardiac catheterisation-echocardiographic studies were performed at rest and during exercise in 97 subjects with dyspnoea. Echocardiography-estimated pulmonary artery systolic pressure (ePASP) was calculated from the right ventricular (RV) to right atrial (RA) pressure gradient and estimated RA pressure (eRAP), and then compared with directly measured PASP and RAP.
RESULTS: Estimated PASP was obtainable in 57% of subjects at rest, but feasibility decreased to 15-16% during exercise, due mainly to an inability to obtain eRAP during stress. Estimated PASP correlated well with direct PASP at rest (r=0.76, p<0.0001; bias -1 mmHg) and during exercise (r=0.76, p=0.001; bias +3 mmHg). When assuming eRAP of 10 mmHg, ePASP correlated with direct PASP (r=0.70, p<0.0001), but substantially underestimated true values (bias +9 mmHg), with the greatest underestimation among patients with severe exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension (EIPH). Estimation of eRAP during exercise from resting eRAP improved discrimination of patients with or without EIPH (area under the curve 0.81), with minimal bias (5 mmHg), but wide limits of agreement (-14-25 mmHg).
CONCLUSIONS: The RV-RA pressure gradient can be estimated with reasonable accuracy during exercise when measurable. However, RA hypertension frequently develops in patients with EIPH, and the inability to noninvasively account for this leads to substantial underestimation of exercise pulmonary artery pressures.
Copyright ©ERS 2020.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 31771997     DOI: 10.1183/13993003.01617-2019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Respir J        ISSN: 0903-1936            Impact factor:   16.671


  5 in total

Review 1.  Performance and Interpretation of Invasive Hemodynamic Exercise Testing.

Authors:  C Charles Jain; Barry A Borlaug
Journal:  Chest       Date:  2020-05-28       Impact factor: 9.410

Review 2.  Echocardiographic RV-E/e' for predicting right atrial pressure: a review.

Authors:  A J Fletcher; S Robinson; B S Rana
Journal:  Echo Res Pract       Date:  2020-12

3.  Exercise testing in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction: an appraisal through diagnosis, pathophysiology and therapy - A clinical consensus statement of the Heart Failure Association and European Association of Preventive Cardiology of the European Society of Cardiology.

Authors:  Marco Guazzi; Matthias Wilhelm; Martin Halle; Emeline Van Craenenbroeck; Hareld Kemps; Rudolph A de Boer; Andrew J S Coats; Lars Lund; Donna Mancini; Barry Borlaug; Gerasimos Filippatos; Burkert Pieske
Journal:  Eur J Heart Fail       Date:  2022-07-31       Impact factor: 17.349

Review 4.  Exercise Stress Echocardiography in the Diagnostic Evaluation of Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction.

Authors:  Tomonari Harada; Kazuki Kagami; Toshimitsu Kato; Hideki Ishii; Masaru Obokata
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Dev Dis       Date:  2022-03-17

5.  Accuracy of echocardiographic estimates of pulmonary artery pressures in pulmonary hypertension: insights from the KARUM hemodynamic database.

Authors:  Ashwin Venkateshvaran; Natavan Seidova; Hande Oktay Tureli; Barbro Kjellström; Lars H Lund; Erik Tossavainen; Per Lindquist
Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2021-06-19       Impact factor: 2.357

  5 in total

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