| Literature DB >> 33864580 |
Michael Dandel1,2.
Abstract
Due to the SARS-CoV-2 infection-related severe pulmonary tissue damages associated with a relative specific widespread thrombotic microangiopathy, the pathophysiologic role of heart-lung interactions becomes crucial for the development and progression of right ventricular (RV) dysfunction. The high resistance in the pulmonary circulation, as a result of small vessel thrombosis and hypoxemia, is the major cause of right heart failure associated with a particularly high mortality in severe COVID-19. Timely identification of patients at high risk for RV failure, optimization of mechanical ventilation to limit its adverse effects on RV preload and afterload, avoidance of medication-related increase in the pulmonary vascular resistance, and the use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in refractory respiratory failure with hemodynamic instability, before RV failure develops, can improve patient survival. Since it was confirmed that the right-sided heart is particularly involved in the clinical deterioration of patients with COVID-19 and pressure overload-induced RV dysfunction plays a key role for patient outcome, transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) received increasing attention. Limited TTE focused on the right heart appears highly useful in hospitalized COVID-19 patients and particularly beneficial for monitoring of critically ill patients. In addition to detection of right-sided heart dilation and RV dysfunction, it enables assessment of RV-pulmonary arterial coupling and evaluation of RV adaptability to pressure loading which facilitate useful prognostic statements to be made. The increased use of bedside TTE focused on the right heart could facilitate more personalized management and treatment of hospitalized patients and can contribute towards reducing the high mortality associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Echocardiography; Heart failure; Heart–lung interaction; Pulmonary vessel thrombosis; Right ventricle
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33864580 PMCID: PMC8052527 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-021-10108-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Fail Rev ISSN: 1382-4147 Impact factor: 4.654
Heart–lung interactions in patients with COVID-19
| Studies | Relevance of heart–lung interactions in COVID-19 |
|---|---|
| Fox et al. [ | • Diffuse alveolar damage accompanied by thrombosed small vessels in all lungs, as well as RV dilation present in 41% of the deceased patients were the most significant autopsy findings |
| Dolhnikoff et al. [ | • Autopsy revealed a variable number of small fibrinous thrombi in small pulmonary arterioles in areas of both damaged and more preserved lung parenchyma in 8 out of 10 cases |
| García-Cruz et al. [ | • In the ICU, the most frequent ECHO findings were elevated PAPs, RV dilatation and RV dysfunction (detected in 69.5%, 28% and 27% of patients, respectively) • PAPs > 35 mmHg increased the probability of in-hospital mortality |
| Zeng et al. [ | • 29% of patients treated in the ICU had PAPs values > 40 mmHg |
| Mahmoud-Elsayed et al. [ | • The chief ECHO abnormalities in 78 investigated patients were RV dilatation and RV dysfunction in 41% and 27%, respectively. RV impairment was associated with increased D-dimer levels • LV function was hyperdynamic or normal in most (89%) patients |
| Goudot et al. [ | • In hospitalized patients (56% of them in the ICU) hs-TnI and D-dimer levels were significantly correlated with both PAPs and TAPSE. Additionally, D-dimer levels correlated also with RV dilation ( • The high predictive value of elevated hs-TnI for ICU referral in patients without LV alterations, together with the correlation of D-dimer with RV dilatation, confirms the relevance of COVID-19-associated pulmonary microvascucular thrombosis-induced RV afterload increase with the resulting high wall tension-induced RV myocardial damage and dysfunction |
| Giustino et al. [ | • 26% of patients with biomarker evidence of myocardial injury had ECHO signs of RV dysfunction which was associated with a three-fold increased risk of death |
| Argulian et al.[ | • ECHO revealed RV dilation in 31% of the hospitalized patients with similar prevalence of major co-morbidities, laboratory markers of myocardial injury or inflammation, and also similar LV size and EF compared with those without RV dilation • Nearly 4 times higher mortality rate in patients with RV dilation than in those without dilation (41% and 11%, respectively). On multivariate analysis, RV enlargement was the only variable significantly associated with mortality |
| Li et al. [ | • ECHO monitoring reveled that compared with survivors, non-survivors displayed enlarged right heart chambers, reduced RV function and elevated PAPs • RVLS, FACRV, and TAPSE were associated with higher mortality (area under the curve 0.87, 0.72 and 0.67, respectively) |
| D’Alto et al. [ | • COVID 19-induced ARDS is associated with early RV-PA uncoupling. 25 (67%) of the 37 invasively ventilated patients died. Non-survivors had nearly 3 times higher D-dimer plasma levels (p < 0.001) as well as higher PAPS and lower TAPSE (p < 0.001). Reduction of TAPSE/PASP was identified as an independent predictor of mortality. In non-survivors LV size was normal, and LVEF was ≥ 50% |
| Szekely et al. [ | • RV dilation and dysfunction were the most frequent ECHO abnormalities (detectable in 39% of patients) with a 5 times higher incidence than the reduction of LVEF. RV dysfunction correlated with troponin levels. • During follow-up, 50% of patients showing clinical deterioration revealed also further worsening of RV parameters, whereas the LV function remains normal in all those patients |
| Schott et al. [ | • ECHO revealed RV dilation and increased RV/LV ratio in the majority of hospitalized patients (74% and 82%, respectively), whereas reduction of LVEF was detected only in 3% of the patients |
| Rivinius et al. [ | • In mechanically ventilated heart transplant recipients with COVID-19, the mortality of can reach 87% and appeared associated with RV dysfunction accompanied by increased PAP, whereas none of them showed LVEF reduction |
| Caravita et al. [ | • The prevalence of PH (mean PAP ≥ 25 mmHg) was 4 times higher in ventilated COVID-19 patients with ARDS compared to those without the need for mechanical ventilation (76% vs. 19%, p < 0.001) |
| Doyen et al. [ | • Patients with cardiac injury (increased hs-TnI) experienced 3.6 times more RV than LV systolic dysfunction (47% and 13%, respectively) |
RV right ventricle, ICU intensive care unit, ECHO echocardiography, PAPs systolic pulmonary arterial pressure, LV left ventricle, EF ejection fraction, RVLS right ventricular longitudinal strain, FAC right ventricular fractional area change, TAPSE tricuspid annulus peak systolic excursion, PH pulmonary hypertension, PAP pulmonary arterial pressure, ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, hs-TnI high-sensitive troponin I
Fig. 1Pathophysiologic role of heart–lung interactions for the development and progression of life-threatening RV dysfunction during SARS-COV-2 infection. The bold red arrows indicate the major direct impact of the virus on the lung tissue. The red dotted arrows indicate other possible direct cardiovascular damages of the virus with prognostic relevance
Simple parameters and indices obtainable by bedside limited transthoracic echocardiography for assessment of the right heart in patients with high resistance in the pulmonary circulation [56, 63, 68, 70, 77, 81, 82, 85, 86, 88, 91]
| Parameters and indices | RV dysfunction due to high resistance in the pulmonary circulation | Preserved RV contractile function | Reduced RV contractile function |
|---|---|---|---|
| RVEDD, RVEDA | • Increased | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| S/L RV axis ratio | • Increased (> 0.57) | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| RA size | • Increased | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| Atrial septum | • Shift to left | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| TR | • New appearance or aggravation of preexistent TR | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| Ventricular septum | • Shift to left | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| RVEDD/LVEDD | • Increased (> 0.65 up to ≥ 1.0) | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| FACRV | • Reduced (< 0.35%) | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| TAPSE | • Reduced (< 1.6 mm) | • No specific change* | • No specific change* |
| SV | • Progressive reduction | • Reduced only at excessively high afterload | • Reduced already at moderate afterload increase |
| ∆PRV-RA | • Initially progressive increase, then progressive reduction to low values | • Increased (> 35 mmHg) | • Reduced (no defined cut-off value) |
FACRV/RVSP and TAPSE/RVSP (RV-PA coupling) | • Reduced (FACRV/RVSP < 1; TAPSE/RVSP < 0.635) The initial decrease is mainly due to the RVSP increase, followed by further decrease also due to SV reduction Later, despite the additional reduction of myocardial contractility both FACRV and TAPSE reduction can be counterbalanced by the increasing TR which reduces the diagnostic relevance of the ratios | • Reduction is likely in patients with only mild to moderately reduced FACRV and/or TAPSE in the presence of excessively high RVSP | • Reduced in patients with relevantly reduced FACRV and/or TAPSE in the presence of only moderately increased RVSP |
| LAIRV | • Initially progressive increase (preserved adaptability to load), then progressive reduction to low values (afterload mismatch) | • High (> 18) | • Low (< 15) indicates the necessity for temporary mechanical RV support |
ECHO echocardiography; RV right ventricle; RVEDD and RVEDA RV end-diastolic diameter and end-diastolic area, respectively; S/L short/long axis ratio; SV stroke volume; RA right atrium; TR tricuspid regurgitation; LVEDD left ventricular end-diastolic diameter; FAC fractional area change; TAPSE tricuspid annulus peak systolic excursion; ∆P pressure gradient between RV and RA during systole; RVSP RV systolic pressure; RV-PA right ventricular-pulmonary artery; LAI RV load adaptation index
*Parameter alteration indicates RV alteration which could be caused by both high afterload and decreased myocardial contractility (etiopathogenetic differentiation not possible)
**Useful for differentiation between patients with and without reduced RV contractile function
aThe LAIRV can be useful to predict therapy-refractory RVF in both pre- and post-capillary PH
Fig. 2Calculation of the right ventricular load adaptation index (LAIRV). a Measurement of the right ventricular (RV) end-diastolic area (AED) and long axis lengths in the apical 4 chamber view. b and c Measurement of the tricuspid regurgitation velocity–time integral (VTITR) using the continuous wave Doppler. The LAIRV value of 17.0 is reduced and indicates that in this patient with pulmonary arterial hypertension (pulmonary arterial systolic and mean pressure: 48 mmHg and 37 mmHg, respectively), the RV dilation is more pronounced than one would expect on the basis of its present afterload. The limited adaptation possibilities to the increased afterload are exceeded, and a reduction of pulmonary vascular resistance is highly needed in order to prevent further aggravation of RV dysfunction
Fig. 3Major signs of either right ventricular improvement or further deterioration revealed by echocardiographic monitoring of patients with increased resistance in the pulmonary circulation. RV right ventricle, TR tricuspid valve regurgitation, SV stroke volume, CO cardiac output, LAIRV right ventricular load adaptation index, TAPSE tricuspid annulus peak systolic excursion, FACRV RV fractional area change, RVLS right ventricular longitudinal strain