Pulmonary hypertension is considered present when the mean PA pressure
is greater than 25 mm Hg at rest or 30 mm Hg during exercise.
Etiology and Classification
- Secondary pulmonary
hypertension is present when there is a identifiable cause with
hemodynamic sequelae leading to pulmonary hypertension. Disease of the
left heart, pulmonary embolism, chronic hypoxemia and left to right shunts
are common etiologies.
- Primary pulmonary
hypertension is obviously idiopathic. However, it is often associated with
cirrhosis , AIDS and can be familial.
Pathogenesis
Elevated pressure, through endothelial cell dysfunction, produces structural changes in the pulmonary vasculature. These changes ultimately decrease pulmonary blood flow and stress the heart to the point of failure. Based on etiology, pulmonary hypertension is divided into two categories.
Elevated pressure, through endothelial cell dysfunction, produces structural changes in the pulmonary vasculature. These changes ultimately decrease pulmonary blood flow and stress the heart to the point of failure. Based on etiology, pulmonary hypertension is divided into two categories.
- Primary (idiopathic): The cause is unknown.
- Secondary: The hypertension is
secondary to a variety of conditions which increase pulmonary blood flow
or increase resistance to blood flow. Example: Interstitial fibrosis.
Pathology
The changes involve large and small pulmonary blood vessels and range from mild to severe. The major changes includeatherosclerosis, striking medial hypertrophy and intimal fibrosis of small arteries and arterioles, and plexogenic arteriopathy. Refer to Figure 15-7 in your textbook.
The changes involve large and small pulmonary blood vessels and range from mild to severe. The major changes includeatherosclerosis, striking medial hypertrophy and intimal fibrosis of small arteries and arterioles, and plexogenic arteriopathy. Refer to Figure 15-7 in your textbook.
Pathophysiology
Dyspnea and fatigue eventually give way to irreversible respiratory insufficiency,
cyanosis and cor pulmonale
Clinical Features
- Primary pulmonary
hypertension often occurs in young females. Dyspnea on exertion, fatigue,
syncope, dizziness, edema and angina occur during the course of illness.
- Loud pulmonary component of
the second heart sound, pulmonary ejection click, RV lift, S4 gallop, syst
murmur of tricuspid regurgitation and a diastolic murmur of pulmonary
regurgitation can be recognized. Findings are subtle and the diagnosis is
often missed.
- Complex testing is often
required to establish the presence of pulmonary hypertension and to rule
out secondary causes.
Therapy
- Prognosis is poor and five
year survival is between 22-33%.
- See cor pulmonale for
therapeutic measures for secondary pulmonary hypertension.
- Anticoagulation, Calcium
channel blocks, Nitric oxide and Prostacyclin are current therapeutic
options.
- Anticoagulation has to given
indefinitely.
- 20-35 % of patients respond
to vasodilators acutely and benefit from their use.
- Infusion of prostacycline,
continuously and chronically, improves hemodynamics, symptoms and
survival. This requires implantation of a permanent central venous
catheter, use of an external portable infusion pump and comprehensively
trained support staff.
- Lung transplant is an option
for patients refractory to medical management.
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