19 research outputs found

    Riociguat treatment in patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension: Final safety data from the EXPERT registry

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    Objective: The soluble guanylate cyclase stimulator riociguat is approved for the treatment of adult patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and inoperable or persistent/recurrent chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) following Phase

    Function of the Right Ventricle

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    It is becoming increasingly clear that the right ventricle plays an important role in the circulatory system. Especially in disease states, right ventricular (RV) function may be of great importance. As such, knowledge on RV function in both health and disease is essential for clinicians. This chapter provides current available knowledge on RV function, starting with a brief description of ideas on RV function that have passed from the second century up to now. This will be followed by a description of the physiology of cardiomyocyte and RV contraction and relaxation. Furthermore, the most used and up till now most applicable method to describe RV myocardial systolic and diastolic function in terms of their stiffness (“elastances”) using the systolic and diastolic pressure-volume relationships is explained in detail. Finally, factors that are known to regulate RV function are discussed

    Portopulmonary hypertension and the liver transplant candidate

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    The management of the liver transplant (OLT) candidate with portopulmonary hypertension (PPHTN) has dramatically changed in the past 3 years. Careful preoperative evaluation with functional characterization of right ventricular function plays a critical role. The pulmonary vascular response to epoprostenol infusion serves as a deciding factor for OLT candidacy. Careful perioperative attention to avoid right ventricular failure from acutely elevated pulmonary artery pressures or sudden increases in right ventricular preload is a key physiologic tenet of management. With increased surgical expertise, anesthetic sophistication, and availability of epoprostenol, PPHTN is no longer considered an absolute contraindication for OLT

    Successful use of chronic epoprostenol as a bridge to liver transplantation in severe portopulmonary hypertension

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    Background. Portopulmonary hypertension, defined as mean pulmonary artery pressure \u3e25 mmHg in the presence of a normal pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and portal hypertension, is a known complication of end-stage liver disease that has been associated with high morbidity and mortality at the time of liver transplantation. We have recently reported the successful treatment of portopulmonary hypertension with chronic intravenous epoprostenol and now report the first patient with severe portopulmonary hypertension successfully treated with epoprostenol who subsequently underwent successful liver transplantation. Methods. A patient with severe portopulmonary hypertension was treated with intravenous epoprostenol, 23 ng/kg/min, for a 4-month period, after which the portopulmonary hypertension resolved and the patient underwent successful liver transplantation. Results. The patient was discharged, continues to do well, and at 3 months is off epoprostenol with near normal pulmonary artery pressures. Conclusions. Chronic epoprostenol, in conjunction with a multidisciplinary, well-planned perioperative evaluation and treatment plan, may be the answer to a heretofore untreatable disease

    Idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension and co-existing lung disease: is this a new phenotype?

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    Patients classified as idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (defined as Group 1 on European Respiratory Society (ERS)/European Cardiac Society (ESC) criteria) may have evidence of minor co-existing lung disease on thoracic computed tomography. We hypothesised that these idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension patients (IPAH lung disease) are a separate subgroup of idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension with different phenotype and outcome compared with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension patients without co-existing lung disease (IPAH no lung disease). Patients with ‘IPAH lung disease’ have been eligible for all clinical trials of Group 1 patients because they have normal clinical examination and normal spirometry but we wondered whether they responded to treatment and had similar survival to patients with ‘IPAH no lung disease’. We described the outcome of the cohort of patients with ‘IPAH no lung disease’ in a previous paper. Here, we have compared incident ‘IPAH lung disease’ patients with ‘IPAH no lung disease’ patients diagnosed concurrently in all eight Pulmonary Hypertension centres in the UK and Ireland between 2001–2009. Compared with ‘IPAH no lung disease’ (n = 355), ‘IPAH lung disease’ patients (n = 137) were older, less obese, predominantly male, more likely to be current/ex-smokers and had lower six-minute walk distance, lower % predicted diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide, lower mean pulmonary arterial pressure and lower pulmonary vascular resistance index. After three months of pulmonary hypertension-targeted treatment, six-minute walk distance improved equally in ‘IPAH lung disease’ and ‘IPAH no lung disease’. However, survival of ‘IPAH lung disease’ was lower than ‘IPAH no lung disease’ (one year survival: 72% compared with 93%). This survival was significantly worse in ‘IPAH lung disease’ even after adjusting for age, gender, smoking history, comorbidities and haemodynamics. ‘IPAH lung disease’ patients had similar short-term improvement in six-minute walk distance with anti-pulmonary arterial hypertension therapy but worse survival compared with ‘IPAH no lung disease’ patients. This suggests that ‘IPAH lung disease’ are a separate phenotype and should not be lumped with ‘IPAH no lung disease’ in clinical trials of Group 1 pulmonary arterial hypertension

    Survival in portopulmonary hypertension: Outcomes of the United Kingdom National Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Registry

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    Background: Portopulmonary hypertension (PoPH) is a rare condition associated with poor survival, and the effect of modern therapies that target pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) on long-term outcome is unknown. This study investigated the baseline characteristics and survival in the cohort of patients diagnosed with PoPH in the United Kingdom National Pulmonary Hypertension Service. Methods: A retrospective review was conducted of all incident treatment-naïve patients with PoPH within the United Kingdom national registry diagnosed between January 2001 and December 2010. Results: Patients with PoPH (n = 110) had survival rates of 85%, 60%, and 35% at 1, 3, and 5 years. The prevalence of PoPH was 0.85 cases/1 million. Mean age at diagnosis was 53 ± 12 years, with a balanced distribution in gender. Alcohol (n = 57) and hepatitis C (n = 10) were the most common causes of portal hypertension. Phosphodiesterase V inhibitors were the most frequently used targeted therapy, in 63.6% (n = 70) of patients, endothelin receptor antagonists were used in 10% (n = 11) and prostacyclin analogs in 12.7% (n = 14). Univariate and multivariate analysis of baseline characteristics did not demonstrate a significant influence of severity of portal hypertension or liver cirrhosis, World Health Organization Functional Class, cardiopulmonary hemodynamics, or year of diagnosis on survival. Conclusions: Survival of patients with PoPH remains poor despite targeted therapy and worse than patients with idiopathic PAH. The benefit of PAH therapies in PoPH on long-term morbidity and mortality outcomes needs further consideration and study
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