Extract
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a haemodynamic syndrome defined by a mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) >25 mmHg determined by right heart catheterisation (RHC) [1, 2]. A lot of diseases fulfil this definition, but they differ widely between each other in respect to their pathophysiology, their haemodynamic characteristics, their clinical presentation, their natural prognosis and their potential therapeutic strategies. The current guidelines on PH diagnosis and management make the distinction between five groups of more than 200 causes of PH [2], but these diseases are very different from one another. In the current classification, the first group (group 1) represents a progressive vasculopathy leading to pre-capillary PH called pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), characterised by a characteristic small-calibre pulmonary artery remodelling, as a result of proliferation of endothelial and smooth muscle cells as well as medial hypertrophy. So, if we compare PAH (for example idiopathic PAH) from PH due to valvular disease like mitral insufficiency (group 2.3) it is easy to understand that apart from the fact that mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) exceeds 25 mmHg in both cases, these two entities have very different pathophysiological pathways. In the first case, there is a true pulmonary vasculopathy. In the second, PH is mainly related to the consequences of an increased hydrostatic pressure in the left atrium transmitted to the venous compartment of the pulmonary circulation and then back through the capillary bed. If the pathophysiology of these entities is different, the targets of their treatments are too. The main goal of PAH treatment consists in reducing pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) with specific medication and, when appropriate, with specific treatment of the underlying disease as it is the case for associated-PAH (group 1.4). Alternatively, the management of PH related to a mitral regurgitation would be to improve the ventricular preload, diminish the ventricular afterload and, if necessary, to correct the anatomical anomaly.
Abstract
The distinction between PH in the elderly and normal ageing might make diagnosis difficult http://ow.ly/YYF1Q
Footnotes
Conflict of interest Disclosures can be found alongside the online version of this article at breathe.ersjournals.com
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