| Literature DB >> 33869298 |
Omar Tamimi1, Mohammed H A Mohammed2,3,4,5.
Abstract
Pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) plays a major role in congenital heart management and critical decision. The impact of pulmonary vascular disease in the early and late morbidity and mortality after cardiac surgery and interventional catheterization in congenital heart defect (CHD) highlights the importance of critical evaluation for PVR. Currently, PVR is evaluated with invasive cardiac catheterization for hemodynamic data collection, processing, and analysis. Despite the limitation of hemodynamic evaluation in the setting of CHD, accurate data analysis, and interpretation have significant impact on clinical outcome and procedure success. This article reviews the basic calculation of PVR in the setting of congenital heart disease with diagrammatic illustration for easy understanding of the hemodynamic.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac; catheterization; congenital; heart; resistance
Year: 2021 PMID: 33869298 PMCID: PMC8044299 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2021.607104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1(A) In normal and simple shunt condition, the pulmonary flow is constant, and flow divided to the left (LL) and right (RL) lung, and then connected to the left atrium (LA); both lungs to the left atrium create flow resistance for calculation. Systemic (SV) and pulmonic (PV) ventricles work as pump and force generator. (B) In pulmonary flow from systemic, the pulmonary flow depends on the size of connection and systemic pressure and flow. The resistance can be calculated by direct measurement of pulmonary artery pressure and left atrium or wedge mean pressure and calculated pulmonary flow. The two lungs can be considered as one unit; no significant pulmonary artery stenosis and reduced flow to one lung. (C) Disconnected lung, the pulmonic ventricle (PV) ejects blood (pulmonary flow) to one lung (right or left lung R/L). The other lung is disconnected lung (red circle) and can have systemic blood supply from systemic ventricle (SV) via shunt or patent ductus arteriosus or major aortopulmonary collaterals and has parallel resistance with other systemic organs. (D) In the bidirectional cavopulmonary anastomosis, the upper part of the body venous return is the main blood supply for the lung; the PVR is calculated as in series resistance. The lower part of the body has venous return to the heart directly. (E) In total cavopulmonary anastomosis, the pulmonary artery is connected to systemic venous return and received total cardiac output flow.