Literature DB >> 8897919

Matching dicrotic notch and mean pulmonary artery pressures: implications for effective arterial elastance.

D Chemla1, J L Hébert, C Coirault, S Salmeron, K Zamani, Y Lecarpentier.   

Abstract

It has been suggested that pulmonary artery pressure at the end of ejection is close to mean pulmonary artery pressure, thus contributing to the optimization of external power from the right ventricle. We tested the hypothesis that dicrotic notch and mean pulmonary artery pressures could be of similar magnitude in 15 men (50 +/- 12 yr) referred to our laboratory for diagnostic right and left heart catheterization. Beat-to-beat relationships between dicrotic notch and mean pulmonary artery pressures were studied 1) at rest over 10 consecutive beats and 2) in 5 patients during the Valsalva maneuver (178 beats studied). At rest, there was no difference between dicrotic notch and mean pulmonary artery pressures (21.8 +/- 12.0 vs. 21.9 +/- 11.1 mmHg). There was a strong linear relationship between dicrotic notch and mean pressures 1) over the 10 consecutive beats studied in each patient (mean r = 0.93), 2) over the 150 resting beats (r = 0.99), and 3) during the Valsalva maneuver in each patient (r = 0.98-0.99) and in the overall beats (r = 0.99). The difference between dicrotic notch and mean pressures was -0.1 +/- 1.7 mmHg at rest and -1.5 +/- 2.3 mmHg during the Valsalva maneuver. Substitution of the mean pulmonary artery pressure by the dicrotic notch pressure in the standard formula of the pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) resulted in an equation relating linearly end-systolic pressure and stroke volume. The slope of this relation had the dimension of a volume elastance (in mmHg/ml), a simple estimate of volume elastance being obtained as 1.06(PVR/T), where T is duration of the cardiac cycle. In conclusion, dicrotic notch pressure was of similar magnitude as mean pulmonary artery pressure. These results confirmed our primary hypothesis and indicated that human pulmonary artery can be treated as if it is an elastic chamber with a volume elastance of 1.06(PVR/T).

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Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8897919     DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.1996.271.4.H1287

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  10 in total

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2.  Abnormal right ventricular relaxation in pulmonary hypertension.

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Review 4.  Right Ventricular-Pulmonary Vascular Interactions.

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Journal:  Physiology (Bethesda)       Date:  2017-09

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7.  Pathophysiology of the right ventricle and of the pulmonary circulation in pulmonary hypertension: an update.

Authors:  Anton Vonk Noordegraaf; Kelly Marie Chin; François Haddad; Paul M Hassoun; Anna R Hemnes; Susan Roberta Hopkins; Steven Mark Kawut; David Langleben; Joost Lumens; Robert Naeije
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9.  Cardiac remodelling in a swine model of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension: comparison of right vs. left ventricle.

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10.  Right ventriculo-arterial uncoupling and impaired contractile reserve in obese patients with unexplained exercise intolerance.

Authors:  Colm McCabe; Rudolf K F Oliveira; Farbod Rahaghi; Mariana Faria-Urbina; Luke Howard; Richard G Axell; Andrew N Priest; Aaron B Waxman; David M Systrom
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  10 in total

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