Cause:
WHO classifications types 1-5 (J Am Coll Cardiol 2004;43:55)
Primary types due to autosomal dominant gene in 6% (Nejm 2001;345:319) including ones assoc w HAT (Nejm 2001;345:325); maybe Kaposi sarcoma associated human herpes virus 8 (HHV-8)? (Nejm 2003;349:1113)
Secondary causes: COPD w hypoxia (most commonly), recurrent chronic pulmonary emboli (Nejm 2001;345:1465; Ann IM 1988;108:425), silicosis, sarcoid, CHF, mitral stenosis, L-to-R shunts, most of which worsen w vasodilator rx (Ann IM 1986;105:499), HIV infection and hereditary hemolytic anemias (Jama 2008;299:324), cocaine and/or iv drug use, cirrhosis, and fenfluramine-type anorexic drugs (Nejm 1996;335:609), collagen vascular diseases like scleroderma (Ann IM 2000;132:425) where >50% get pulm HT (Am J Med 1983;75:65)
Pathophys: (Nejm 2004;351:1655)
Vascular proliferation, vasoconstriction, and thrombosis all increase pulm vascular resistance. Excess platelet thromboxane A and deficient endothelial cell prostacyclin, nitric oxide, and enothelin production are associated w both primary and secondary pulmonary HT; cause or effect? Worsened by hypoxia, cocaine, and weight-loss drugs related to amphetamines.
Onset over 1-3 yr
Table 16.4 Symptoms of Pulmonary HT
Sx | As 1st Sx (%) | Present Sometime During Crs (%) |
---|---|---|
Exertional dyspnea | 60 | 98 |
Fatigue | 20 | 73 |
Chest pain | 7 | 47 |
Syncope or near-syncope | 13 | 77 |
Edema | 3 | 37 |
Palpitations | 5 | 33 |
Raynaud's | ? | 10 |
Si:P2 A2; RV heave; R-sided S3; pulmonary systolic and diastolic murmur
Progressive; median survival is 2.8 yr; 68% survive 1 yr, 50% survive 3 yr, and 34% survive 5 yr, worse if mean PA pressure 85 mm Hg, mean RA pressure >20, or cardiac index <2 L/min/m2 (Ann IM 1991;115:343). Even w prostacycline rx, still have 33% 3-yr mortality
Cor pulmonale, sudden death (7%)
Lab:
ABGs:Low pCO2 often is the only abnormality; hypoxia later in course, 1st exertional, then at rest
NIL, cardiac echo: RH, tricuspid regurgitation, pulmonary artery HT
Rx:
of secondary types, rx the cause if possible; thrombectomy successful in chronic emboli patients even after yrs (Nejm 2001;345:1465); O2 critical if hypoxic etiology
of primary type: avoid indomethacin and other prostaglandin inhibitors, which increase pressure (Ann IM 1982;97:480)
of both types: avoid iron deficiency (Jama 2009;302:1444)