Pathophysiology and Diagnosis of Pulmonary Hypertension Due to Left Heart Disease
Author(s) -
Athanasios Charalampopoulos,
Robert A. Lewis,
Peter Hickey,
Charlotte Durrington,
Charlie Elliot,
Robin Condliffe,
Ian Sabroe,
David G. Kiely
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
frontiers in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.388
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2296-858X
DOI - 10.3389/fmed.2018.00174
Subject(s) - pulmonary hypertension , cardiology , medicine , cardiac catheterization , heart failure , diastole , ejection fraction , vascular resistance , hemodynamics , blood pressure
Pulmonary hypertension due to left heart disease (PH-LHD) is the most common type of pulmonary hypertension, although an accurate prevalence is challenging. PH-LHD includes PH due to systolic or diastolic left ventricular dysfunction, mitral or aortic valve disease and congenital left heart disease. In recent years a new and distinct phenotype of “combined post-capillary and pre-capillary PH,” based on diastolic pulmonary gradient and pulmonary vascular resistance, has been recognized. The roles of right ventricular dysfunction and pulmonary vascular compliance in PH-LHD have also been elucidated recently and they appear to have significant clinical implications. Echocardiography continues to play a seminal role in diagnosis of PH-LHD and heart failure with preserved LV ejection fraction, as it can identify valve disease and help to distinguish PH-LHD from pre-capillary PH. Right, and occasionally left heart catheterization, remains the gold-standard for diagnosis and phenotyping of PH-LHD, although Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging is emerging as a useful alternative tool in non-invasive diagnostic and prognostic assessment of PH-LHD. In this review, the latest evidence for more recent advances will be discussed, including the role of fluid challenge and exercise during cardiac catheterization to unravel occult post-capillary and the role of vasoreactivity testing. The use of many or all of these diagnostic techniques will undoubtedly provide key information about sub-groups of patients with PH-LHD that might benefit from medical therapy previously considered to be only suitable for pulmonary arterial hypertension.
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