The complication of pulmonary vein stenosis is potentially life-threatening, and the application of radiofrequency current within the pulmonary veins with standard catheter technology should be avoided. This complication can be treated with balloon dilation, although the long-term course is unknown.
Epoprostenol has markedly improved the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension, although predictors of outcome with epoprostenol are not well characterized. From June 1995 through August 2001, 91 patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension were treated with epoprostenol at our institution. We analyzed the effects of long-term epoprostenol treatment to determine features associated with outcome. Predictors of worse outcome included older age of disease onset (hazard ratio 3.2, 95% confidence interval 1.32-7.76 for patients above the median age of 44 years), World Health Organization functional Class IV, either at baseline or follow-up, (3.07, 1.42-6.62 compared with functional Class I, II, and III), and scleroderma spectrum of disease (2.32, 1.08-4.99). There were no baseline or follow-up hemodynamic factors predictive of outcome. Our results indicate that treatment with epoprostenol improves survival in patients with Primary Pulmonary Hypertension compared with that predicted by the National Institutes of Health Primary Pulmonary Hypertension Registry's survival equation and that their survival is significantly better than that of patients with scleroderma spectrum of disease (p = 0.001). Older patients treated with epoprostenol have significantly shorter survival, regardless of etiology.
Background Fibrosing Mediastinitis (FM) is a rare complication of infection with Histoplasma capsulatum, which can lead to obstruction of pulmonary and systemic vasculature and large airways, often resulting in significant morbidity and mortality. Medical therapy is ineffective and surgical intervention is often not feasible. Stent implantation offers a potential treatment for vascular obstruction due to FM, but this has not been well studied. Methods and Results We conducted a retrospective review of all patients undergoing cardiac catheterization for FM. Anatomic site of stenosis and hemodynamic information before and after intervention, as well as clinical presentation and follow-up data were recorded. From 1996 to 2008, 58 patients underwent cardiac catheterization for FM, with intervention performed in 40 (69%). A total of 77 stents were used to relieve 59 lesions (pulmonary artery = 26, pulmonary vein = 21, superior vena cava = 12). Significant reduction in pressure gradients (p<0.001) and increase in vessel caliber (p<0.001) was seen at all locations. Symptomatic recurrent stenosis requiring further intervention occurred in 11 (28%) patients. Median time to recurrence was 115 months. Thirty-two (87%) of 37 patients for whom follow-up was available reported symptomatic improvement following stent placement. Procedure-related complications occurred in 14 patients (24%). Overall mortality was 19%, with the majority of deaths in patients with bilateral disease. Among patients with bilateral disease, intervention was associated with improved survival at 5 years. Conclusions Percutaneous vascular stent implantation is an effective therapy for central vascular obstruction due to FM, providing significant relief of anatomic obstruction and sustained clinical improvement.
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