Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is frequent in left heart disease (LHD), as a consequence of the underlying condition. Significant advances have occurred over the past 5 years since the 5th World Symposium on Pulmonary Hypertension in 2013, leading to a better understanding of PH-LHD, challenges and gaps in evidence. PH in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction represents the most complex situation, as it may be misdiagnosed with group 1 PH. Based on the latest evidence, we propose a new haemodynamic definition for PH due to LHD and a three-step pragmatic approach to differential diagnosis. This includes the identification of a specific “left heart” phenotype and a non-invasive probability of PH-LHD. Invasive confirmation of PH-LHD is based on the accurate measurement of pulmonary arterial wedge pressure and, in patients with high probability, provocative testing to clarify the diagnosis. Finally, recent clinical trials did not demonstrate a benefit in treating PH due to LHD with pulmonary arterial hypertension-approved therapies.
Objectives To determine how exercise influences penetrance of arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C) among patients with desmosomal mutations. Background While animal models and anecdotal evidence suggest exercise is a risk factor for ARVD/C, there have been no systematic human studies. Methods Eighty-seven carriers (46 male, mean age 44±18) were interviewed about regular physical activity from age ten. The relationship of exercise with; 1) sustained ventricular arrhythmia (VT/VF), 2) stage C heart failure (HF), and 3) meeting diagnostic criteria for ARVD/C (TFC) was studied. Results Endurance athletes (n=56) developed symptoms at a younger age (30.1±13.0 vs. 40.6±21.1 years, p=0.05), were more likely to meet TFC at last follow-up (82% vs. 35%, p<0.001), and had a lower lifetime survival free from VT/VF (p=0.013) and HF (p=0.004). Compared to those who did the least (lowest quartile) exercise per year prior to presentation, those in the second (OR=6.64, p=0.013), third (OR=16.7, p=0.001), and top (OR=25.3, p<0.0001) quartiles were increasingly likely to meet TFC. Among 61 who did not present with VT/VF, the 13 subjects experiencing a first VT/VF event over a mean 8.4±6.7 year follow-up were all endurance athletes (p=0.002). Survival from first VT/VF was lowest among those who exercised most (top quartile) both prior to (p=0.036) and after (p=0.005) clinical presentation. Among individuals in the top quartile, a reduction in exercise decreased VT/VF risk (p=0.04). Conclusions Endurance exercise and frequent exercise increase risk of VT/VF, HF, and ARVD/C in desmosomal mutation carriers. These findings support exercise restriction for these patients.
Background— Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C) is a progressive cardiomyopathy. We aimed to define long-term outcome in a transatlantic cohort of 1001 individuals. Methods and Results— Clinical and genetic characteristics and follow-up data of ARVD/C index-patients (n=439, fulfilling of 2010 criteria in all) and family members (n=562) were assessed. Mutations were identified in 276 index-patients (63%). Index-patients presented predominantly with sustained ventricular arrhythmias (268; 61%). During a median follow-up of 7 years, 301 of the 416 index-patients presenting alive (72%) experienced sustained ventricular arrhythmias. Sudden cardiac death during follow-up occurred more frequently among index-patients without an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (10/63, 16% versus 2/335, 0.6%). Overall, cardiac mortality and the need for cardiac transplantation were low (6% and 4%, respectively). Clinical characteristics and outcomes were similar in index-patients with and without mutations, as well as in those with familial and nonfamilial ARVD/C. ARVD/C was diagnosed in 207 family members (37%). Symptoms at first evaluation correlated with disease expression. Family members with mutations were more likely to meet Task Force Criteria for ARVD/C (40% versus 18%), experience sustained ventricular arrhythmias (11% versus 1%), and die from a cardiac cause (2% versus 0%) than family members without mutations. Conclusions— Long-term outcome was favorable in diagnosed and treated ARVD/C index-patients and family members. Outcome in index-patients was modulated by implantable cardioverter-defibrillator implantation, but not by mutation status and familial background of disease. One third of family members developed ARVD/C. Outcome in family members was determined by symptoms at first evaluation and mutations.
Background Right ventricular (RV) failure from increased pulmonary vascular loading is a major cause of morbidity and mortality, yet its modulation by disease remains poorly understood. We tested the hypotheses that, unlike the systemic circulation, pulmonary vascular resistance (RPA) and compliance (CPA) are consistently and inversely related regardless of age, pulmonary hypertension (PH), or interstitial fibrosis, and that this relation may be changed by elevated pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), augmenting RV pulsatile load. Methods and Results Several large clinical databases with right heart/pulmonary catheterization data were analyzed to determine the RPA-CPA relationship with PH, pulmonary fibrosis, patient age, and varying PCWP. Patients with suspected or documented PH (n=1009) and normal PCWP displayed a consistent RPA-CPA hyperbolic (inverse) dependence; CPA=0.564/(0.047+RPA), with a near constant resistance-compliance product (RC) (0.48±0.17 seconds). In the same patients, the systemic RC was highly variable. Severe pulmonary fibrosis (n=89) did not change the RPA-CPA relation. Increasing patient age led to a very small though statistically significant change in the relation. However, elevation of the PCWP (n=8142) had a larger impact, significantly lowering CPA for any RPA, and negatively correlating RC (p<0.0001). Conclusions PH and pulmonary fibrosis do not significantly change the hyperbolic dependence between RPA and CPA, while patient age has only minimal affects. This fixed relationship helps explain the difficulty of reducing total RV afterload by therapies that have modest impact on mean RPA. Higher PCWP appears to enhance net RV afterload by elevating pulsatile, relative to resistive load, and may contribute to RV dysfunction.
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