학술논문

Nitroprusside Combined with Leg Raise at the Time of Right Heart Catheterization to Differentiate Precapillary from Other Hemodynamic Forms of Pulmonary Hypertension: A Single-Center Pilot Study
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease. April, 2024, Vol. 11 Issue 4
Subject
World Health Organization
Medical research -- Physiological aspects -- Health aspects
Medicine, Experimental -- Physiological aspects -- Health aspects
Cardiac catheterization -- Health aspects -- Physiological aspects
Sodium nitroferricyanide -- Physiological aspects -- Health aspects
Pulmonary hypertension -- Care and treatment
Language
English
ISSN
2308-3425
Abstract
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) can arise from several distinct disease processes, with a percentage presenting with combined pre- and postcapillary pulmonary hypertension (cpcPH). Patients with cpcPH are unsuitable candidates for PH-directed therapies due to elevated pulmonary capillary wedge pressures (PCWPs); however, the PCWP is dynamic and is affected by both preload and afterload. Many patients that are diagnosed with cpcPH are hypertensive at the time of right heart catheterization which has the potential to increase the PCWP and, therefore, mimic a more postcapillary-predominant phenotype. In this small pilot study, we examine the effect of nitroprusside combined with dynamic preload augmentation with a passive leg raise maneuver in hypertensive cpcPH patients at the time of right heart catheterization to identify a more precapillary-dominant PH phenotype. Patients that met the criteria of PCWP ≤ 15 mmHg with nitroprusside infusion and PCWP ≤ 18 mmHg with nitroprusside infusion and simultaneous leg raise were started on pulmonary vascular-targeted therapy. Long-term PH therapy was well tolerated, with increased six-minute walk distance, improved WHO functional class, decreased NT-proBNP, and improved REVEAL 2.0 Lite Risk Score in this precapillary-dominant PH phenotype. This small study highlights the importance of characterizing patient physiology beyond resting conditions at the time of right heart catheterization.
Author(s): Mostafa Naguib [1,†]; Ahmed Aljwaid [1,†]; Dean Marella [2]; Raul J. Flores [3]; Abhishek Singh (corresponding author) [3,*] 1. Introduction Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is defined by an abnormal elevation [...]