Alterations of pulmonary vascular afterload in exercise‐induced pre‐ and post‐capillary pulmonary hypertension

Author:

Karvasarski Elizabeth12,Bentley Robert F.3,Buchan Tayler A.45,Valle Felipe H.6,Wright Stephen P.7,Chang Isaac S.15,Granton John T.45,Mak Susanna124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sinai Health/University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Institute of Medical Science, Faculty of Medicine University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Faculty of Kinesiology and Physical Education University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

4. University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada

5. Department of Medicine University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

6. Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre Porto Alegre Brazil

7. Heart and Vascular Institute University of British Columbia Kelowna British Columbia Canada

Abstract

AbstractExercise imposes increased pulmonary vascular afterload based on rises in pulmonary artery (PA) wedge pressure, declines in PA compliance, and resistance‐compliance time. In health, afterload stress stabilizes during steady‐state exercise. Our objective was to examine alterations of these exercise‐associated stresses in states of pre‐ and post‐capillary pulmonary hypertension (PH). PA hemodynamics were evaluated at rest, 2 and 7 min of steady‐state exercise at moderate intensity in patients who exhibited Pre‐capillary (n = 22) and post‐capillary PH (n = 22). Patients with normal exercise hemodynamics (NOR‐HD) (n = 32) were also studied. During exercise in all groups, PA wedge pressure increased at 2 min, with no further change at 7 min. In post‐capillary PH and NOR‐HD, increases in PA diastolic pressure and diastolic pressure gradient remained stable at 2 and 7 min of exercise, while in pre‐capillary PH, both continued to increase at 7 min. The behavior of the diastolic pressure gradient was linearly related to the duration of resistance‐compliance time at rest (r2 = 0.843) and exercise (r2 = 0.760). Exercise resistance‐compliance time was longer in pre‐capillary PH associated with larger increases in diastolic pressure gradient. Conversely, resistance‐compliance time was shortest in post‐capillary PH compared to pre‐capillary PH and NOR‐HD and associated with limited increases in exercise diastolic pressure gradient. During steady‐state, modest‐intensity exercise‐specific patterns of pulmonary vascular afterload responses were observed in pre‐ and post‐capillary PH relative to NOR‐HD. Longer resistance‐compliance time related to greater increases in PA diastolic pressure and diastolic pressure gradients in pre‐capillary PH, while shorter resistance‐compliance time appeared to limit these increases in post‐capillary PH.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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