Literature DB >> 7947382

Ischemia right ventricular dysfunction.

J López-Sendón1, E López de Sá, J L Delcán.   

Abstract

For many years ischemic heart disease involving the right ventricle had received little attention. During the last 15 years, the initial works of Cohn, Isner, and others spawned a number of clinical and experimental studies that extended the understanding of the pathophysiology of ischemia in the right ventricle. Most of the work has been done in the setting of acute myocardial infarction, and information is still lacking in other conditions, such as chronic ischemic heart disease and perioperative right ventricular dysfunction. Acute right ventricular infarction rarely occurs in the absence of left ventricular necrosis and in most cases is the extension of an inferior left ventricular infarct. The majority of patients with right ventricular infarction only exhibit subtle signs of ischemic dysfunction. Elevated right atrial pressure is found only in the typical syndrome of elevated venous pressure; low output syndrome can be found only in 20% of the cases, and cardiogenic shock secondary to right ventricular necrosis is found only in 10%. It is also important to note that there is not a clear correlation between the severity of ischemic right ventricular dysfunction and the necrotic area. The discrepancy may be due to ischemia without necrosis of the right ventricular wall (stunned myocardium), but the intact pericardium and the necrosis of the interventricular septum may also play an important role. In the most severe form of ischemic right ventricular dysfunction, the entire right ventricular wall is akinetic. Right atrial, right ventricular, and pulmonary artery pressures become similar in magnitude and shape, and the pulmonary valve is opened during diastole, demonstrating a passive blood flow from the right atrium to the left ventricle through the low resistance pulmonary capillary bed. Volume loading, administration of dopamine or dobutamine, and careful use of vasodilators under hemodynamic monitoring are the therapeutic measures to control the severe forms of acute ischemic right ventricular dysfunction. The use of thrombolytic agents has decreased the incidence of right ventricular dysfunction after acute myocardial infarction. Mortality is high in the severe forms of acute ischemic right ventricular dysfunction, but after discharge from hospital the prognosis is good and right heart failure is unusual, even in those patients with shock during the first days of evolution of the infarct.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7947382     DOI: 10.1007/bf00877324

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiovasc Drugs Ther        ISSN: 0920-3206            Impact factor:   3.727


  71 in total

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  1 in total

1.  Right ventricular enlargement predicts responsiveness to tolvaptan in congestive heart failure patients with reduced ejection fraction.

Authors:  Shinichi Nonin; Shinichi Iwata; Asahiro Ito; Soichiro Tamura; Ryoko Kitada; Yu Kawai; Sera Ishikawa; Atsushi Doi; Akihisa Hanatani; Minoru Yoshiyama
Journal:  Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc       Date:  2018-10-10
  1 in total

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