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Pulmonary heart disease: The heart-lung interaction and its impact on patient phenotypes

机译:肺源性心脏病:心肺相互作用及其对患者表型的影响

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摘要

Pulmonary heart disease (PHD) refers to altered structure or function of the right ventricle occurring in association with abnormal respiratory function. Although nearly always associated with some degree of PH, the degree, nature, severity, and causality of PH in relation to the PHD is not necessarily linear and direct. Abnormal gas exchange is a fundamental underpinning of PHD, affecting pulmonary vascular, cardiac, renal, and neurohormonal systems. Direct and indirect effects of chronic respiratory disease can disrupt the right ventricular-pulmonary arterial (RV-PA) interaction and, likewise, factors such as sympathetic nervous system activation, altered blood viscosity, and salt and water retention can function in a feedback loop to further influence RV-PA function. Left heart function may also be affected, especially in those with pre-existing left heart disease. Thus, the physiologic interactions between abnormal respiratory and cardiovascular function are complex, with PHD representing a heterogeneous end organ effect of an integrated multisystem process. In this review, we propose to separate PHD into two distinct entities, “Type I” and “Type II” PHD. Type I PHD is most common, and refers to subjects with chronic respiratory disease (CRD) where the perturbations in respiratory function dominate over more mild cardiac and circulatory disruptions. In contrast, Type II PHD refers to the smaller subset of patients with more severe pulmonary vascular and right heart dysfunction, whom often present in a fashion similar to patients with PAH. Phenotypic differences are not made by PA pressure alone, but instead by differences in the overall physiology and clinical syndrome. Thus, key differences can be seen in symptomatology, physical signs, cardiac imaging, hemodynamics, and the cardiovascular and gas exchange responses to exercise. Such key baseline differences in the overall physiologic phenotype are likely critical to predicting response to PH specific therapy. Recognizing PHD as distinct phenotypes assists in the necessary distinction of these patients, and may also provide a key clinical and pathophysiologic framework for improved patient selection for future studies investigating the role of pulmonary hypertension-specific therapies in PHD.
机译:肺源性心脏病(PHD)是指与呼吸功能异常相关的右心室结构或功能改变。尽管几乎总是与某种程度的PH相关,但是与PHD相关的PH的程度,性质,严重性和因果关系不一定是线性的和直接的。异常的气体交换是PHD的基本基础,会影响肺血管,心脏,肾脏和神经激素系统。慢性呼吸道疾病的直接和间接影响会破坏右心室-肺动脉(RV-PA)的相互作用,同样,诸如交感神经系统激活,血液黏度改变以及盐和水retention留等因素也会在反馈回路中起作用。进一步影响RV-PA功能。左心功能也可能会受到影响,尤其是在患有左心疾病的患者中。因此,异常呼吸和心血管功能之间的生理相互作用是复杂的,PHD代表了集成的多系统过程的异质末端器官效应。在本文中,我们建议将PHD分为两个不同的实体,即“ I型”和“ II型” PHD。 I型PHD最常见,是指患有慢性呼吸道疾病(CRD)的受试者,其呼吸功能扰动主要是较轻度的心脏和循环障碍。相比之下,II型PHD则是指具有更严重的肺血管和右心功能不全的患者的较小子集,这些患者通常以与PAH患者相似的方式出现。表型差异不是仅由PA压力造成的,而是总体生理和临床综合征的差异。因此,在症状,体征,心脏成像,血流动力学以及对运动的心血管和气体交换反应中可以看到关键的差异。总体生理表型的关键基线差异可能对预测对PH特异疗法的反应至关重要。将PHD识别为独特的表型有助于这些患者的必要区分,并且还可能为改善患者选择提供重要的临床和病理生理学框架,以供将来研究肺动脉高压特定疗法在PHD中的作用的研究。

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