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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 101, 432-444, Copyright © 1991 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
RC Bourge, JK Kirklin, DC Naftel, C White, DA Mason and AE Epstein
Elevated pulmonary vascular resistance is a known risk factor for early
death from acute right ventricular failure after orthotopic cardiac
transplantation. Patients in whom the elevated pulmonary vascular
resistance is due primarily to increased left atrial pressure ("reactive")
frequently have normalization of resistance after transplantation, but few
studies have detailed the time course and magnitude of these changes. To
analyze the response of pulmonary vascular resistance to cardiac
transplantation, we analyzed data from 4353 right heart catheterizations on
all 182 patients undergoing cardiac transplantation between 1981 and Jan.
1, 1990. Before transplantation 18% of patients had a pulmonary vascular
resistance greater than 4 WU, 16% had a pulmonary artery systolic pressure
greater than 60 mm Hg, and 16% had a transpulmonary gradient greater than
14 mm Hg. In the overall group of patients, pulmonary vascular resistance
(mean value 2.63 WU), transpulmonary gradient (mean value 9.9 mm Hg), and
pulmonary artery systolic pressure (mean value 48.0 mm Hg) were normalized
within 1 week of cardiac transplantation. In patients with a high
preoperative pulmonary vascular resistance (greater than or equal to 4 WU),
the resistance fell promptly within 1 week of transplantation but continued
to be slightly elevated throughout the period of follow- up. By multiple
regression analysis, pulmonary vascular resistance at 1 week and 1 year
after transplantation was significantly correlated with the
pretransplantation resistance. Pulmonary vascular resistance anytime after
transplantation was related to preoperative resistance, body surface area,
and pulmonary artery diastolic pressure. Inferences: (1) As a group,
cardiac transplant recipients have a normal pulmonary vascular resistance,
transpulmonary gradient, and pulmonary artery systolic pressure within 1
week after transplantation with little change thereafter for at least
several years. (2) Patients with reversible elevation of pulmonary vascular
resistance before cardiac transplantation typically have a reactive and a
fixed component. Cardiac transplantation relieves the reactive but not the
fixed component. As a result, pulmonary vascular resistance early (within 1
week) and late after transplantation will have fallen but not completely
normalized.
ARTICLES
Analysis and predictors of pulmonary vascular resistance after cardiac transplantation
Division of Cardiology, University of Alabama 35294.
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