Disclaimer. The ESC Guidelines represent the views of the ESC and were produced after careful consideration of the scientific and medical knowledge, and the evidence available at the time of their publication. The ESC is not responsible in the event of any contradiction, discrepancy, and/or ambiguity between the ESC Guidelines and any other official recommendations or guidelines issued by the relevant public health authorities, in particular in relation to good use of healthcare or therapeutic strategies. Health professionals are encouraged to take the ESC Guidelines fully into account when exercising their clinical judgment, as well as in the determination and the implementation of preventive, diagnostic, or therapeutic medical strategies; however, the ESC Guidelines do not override, in any way whatsoever, the individual responsibility of health professionals to make appropriate and accurate decisions in consideration of each patient's health condition and in consultation with that patient and, where appropriate and/or necessary, the patient's caregiver. Nor do the ESC Guidelines exempt health professionals from taking into full and careful consideration the relevant official updated recommendations or guidelines issued by the competent public health authorities, in order to manage each patient's case in light of the scientifically accepted data pursuant to their respective ethical and professional obligations. It is also the health professional's responsibility to verify the applicable rules and regulations relating to drugs and medical devices at the time of prescription.
PRESCRIBING IN PRACTICE ■ P ulmonary hypertension refers to increased pressure in the pulmonary arterial circulation. The pulmonary circulation has to accommodate the entire cardiac output in each cardiac cycle, and evolution has adapted to this by making it a low-pressure high-flow system. However, pathology can affect both the arterial and venous components of this system. Pulmonary venous hypertension mainly refers to diseases that result in elevated venous pressure and occurs mainly from mitral valve and left-sided heart disease; these will not be discussed in this article. As a result of greater understanding of the molecular and cellular pathways involved in the pathobiology of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), novel and exciting treatments have become available to treat this condition. These new drugs represent a huge step forward in the treatment of this universally fatal disease in that they allow improvement in quality of life and survival; however, they do not as yet offer a cure. Definition PAH is defined by consensus as a mean pulmonary artery pressure of above 25mmHg in the setting of a normal or reduced cardiac output, with a normal pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) and elevated pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR). The normal PCWP is required to exclude the presence of significant left heart disease and pulmonary venous hypertension. As a result, the diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension requires invasive right-heart catheterisation. Classification Pulmonary hypertension is an umbrella term that refers simply to elevated pressure in the pulmonary vasculature. There are a wide variety of causes of this and the 2008 WHO conference in Dana Point attempted to clarify and organise these into a more defined classification (see Figure 2). 1 This article will focus on PAH (group 1).
Guidelines summarize and evaluate all available evidence on a particular issue at the time of the writing process, with the aim of assisting health professionals in selecting the best management strategies for an individual patient with a given condition, taking into account the impact on outcome, as well as the risk–benefit ratio of particular diagnostic or therapeutic means. Guidelines and recommendations should help health professionals to make decisions in their daily practice. However, the final decisions concerning an individual patient must be made by the responsible health professional(s) in consultation with the patient and caregiver as appropriate.
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