Pulmonary vascular disease in pulmonary hypertension due to left heart disease: pathophysiologic implications

Author:

Omote Kazunori1,Sorimachi Hidemi1,Obokata Masaru1ORCID,Reddy Yogesh N V1,Verbrugge Frederik H123ORCID,Omar Massar1ORCID,DuBrock Hilary M4,Redfield Margaret M1,Borlaug Barry A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Mayo Clinic and Foundation , 200 First Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905 , USA

2. Centre for Cardiovascular Diseases, University Hospital Brussels , Jette , Belgium

3. Biomedical Research Institute, Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences, Hasselt University , Hasselt , Belgium

4. Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, MN , USA

Abstract

Abstract Aims Pulmonary hypertension (PH) and pulmonary vascular disease (PVD) are common and associated with adverse outcomes in left heart disease (LHD). This study sought to characterize the pathophysiology of PVD across the spectrum of PH in LHD. Methods and results Patients with PH-LHD [mean pulmonary artery (PA) pressure >20 mmHg and PA wedge pressure (PAWP) ≥15 mmHg] and controls free of PH or LHD underwent invasive haemodynamic exercise testing with simultaneous echocardiography, expired air and blood gas analysis, and lung ultrasound in a prospective study. Patients with PH-LHD were divided into isolated post-capillary PH (IpcPH) and PVD [combined post- and pre-capillary PH (CpcPH)] based upon pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR <3.0 or ≥3.0 WU). As compared with controls (n = 69) and IpcPH-LHD (n = 55), participants with CpcPH-LHD (n = 40) displayed poorer left atrial function and more severe right ventricular (RV) dysfunction at rest. With exercise, patients with CpcPH-LHD displayed similar PAWP to IpcPH-LHD, but more severe RV–PA uncoupling, greater ventricular interaction, and more severe impairments in cardiac output, O2 delivery, and peak O2 consumption. Despite higher PVR, participants with CpcPH developed more severe lung congestion compared with both IpcPH-LHD and controls, which was associated lower arterial O2 tension, reduced alveolar ventilation, decreased pulmonary O2 diffusion, and greater ventilation-perfusion mismatch. Conclusions Pulmonary vascular disease in LHD is associated with a distinct pathophysiologic signature marked by greater exercise-induced lung congestion, arterial hypoxaemia, RV–PA uncoupling, ventricular interdependence, and impairment in O2 delivery, impairing aerobic capacity. Further study is required to identify novel treatments targeting the pulmonary vasculature in PH-LHD.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Uehara Memorial Foundation

Japan Heart Foundation

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Belgian American Educational Foundation

Special Research Fund

Hasselt University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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