| Literature DB >> 33793649 |
Shun-Ichi Wakabayashi1, Satoru Joshita1, Kazuhiro Kimura2, Hirohiko Motoki2, Hiroyuki Kobayashi1, Yuki Yamashita1, Ayumi Sugiura1, Tomoo Yamazaki1, Koichiro Kuwahara2, Takeji Umemura1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Portopulmonary hypertension (PoPH) is a subtype of the pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) associated with portal hypertension. There is a dissociation between the proportion of PoPH in PAH and that of PoPH in patients with liver cirrhosis, suggesting PoPH underdiagnosis and an incomplete understanding of this entity in the clinical setting. Specifically, real-world data in Japan is largely unknown as compared with in Europe and the United States. The present study aims to elucidate the prevalence and etiology of PoPH in Japanese patients with chronic liver disease. METHODS ANDEntities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33793649 PMCID: PMC8016266 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The study flowchart.
Abbreviations: PH, pulmonary hypertension; PoPH, portopulmonary hypertension.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion criteria |
| Patients must meet all of the following items: |
| 1. Age >20 years |
| 2. Having chronic liver disease |
| 3. Having any symptom indicating portopulmonary hypertension |
| Exclusion criteria |
| Patients with any of the following items are excluded: |
| 1. Having history of chronic heart failure |
| 2. Having history of pulmonary arterial hypertension from any other cause. |
| 3. Unable to be followed at our hospital |
Standardized questionnaire on symptoms suggesting portopulmonary hypertension (translated from Japanese; respondents indicate “yes” or “no”).
| 1) Do you feel you cannot work comparably to other people of the same age and gender? |
| 2) Do you feel you cannot move as fast as other people do? |
| 3) Do you feel you cannot move at the same pace as others? |
| 4) Do you need rest when climbing stairs or carrying heavy loads? |
| 5) Do you ever experience shortness of breath? |
| 6) Do you ever experience faintness? |
| 7) Do you ever experience tiredness and/or persistent malaise? |
| 8) Do you ever experience dizziness and/or vertigo? |
| 9) Do you ever experience facial edema and/or pretibial edema? |
Echocardiographic probability of PAH in patients having symptoms indicative of PAH [21].
| Peak tricuspid regurgitation velocity (m/s) | Presence of other echo PH signs | Echocardiographic probability of PAH |
|---|---|---|
| ≤2.8 | No | Low |
| ≤2.8 | Yes | Intermediate |
| 2.9–3.4 | No | |
| 2.9–3.4 | Yes | High |
| >3.4 | Not required |
Abbreviations: PAH, pulmonary artery hypertension; PH, pulmonary hypertension.
Echocardiographic signs suggesting PAH used to assess the probability of PAH in addition to tricuspid regurgitation velocity measurement in Table 3 [21].
| A: Ventricles | B: Pulmonary artery | C: Inferior vena cava and right atrium |
|---|---|---|
| Right ventricle:left ventricle basal diameter ratio >1.0 | Right ventricular outflow doppler acceleration time <105 msec and/or midsystolic notching | Inferior cava diameter >21 mm with decreased inspiratory collapse (<50% with a sniff or <20% with quiet inspiration) |
| Flattening of the interventricular septum (left ventricular eccentricity index >1.1 in systole and/or diastole) | Early diastolic pulmonary regurgitation velocity >2.2 m/sec | Right atrium area (end-systole) >18 cm2 |
| Pulmonary artery diameter >25 mm |
Abbreviations: PAH, pulmonary artery hypertension.
Diagnosis criteria of PoPH [21–23].
| 1. Existence of PAH by right heart catheraization |
| a. Mean pulmonary artery pressure (mPAP) ≥ 25mmHg |
| b. Pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP) ≤ 15mmHg |
| 2. Existence of portal hypertension |
| Hepatic vein pressure gradient (HVPG) ≥ 5mmHg |
| 3. Rule out of other etiology of PAH |
Abbreviations: PoPH, portopulmonary hypertension; PAH, pulmonary artery hypertension.