4.5 Article

Pulmonary vascular input impedance is a combined measure of pulmonary vascular resistance and stiffness and predicts clinical outcomes better than pulmonary vascular resistance alone in pediatric patients with pulmonary hypertension

Journal

AMERICAN HEART JOURNAL
Volume 155, Issue 1, Pages 166-174

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ahj.2007.08.014

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NATIONAL CENTER FOR RESEARCH RESOURCES [M01RR000069] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  2. NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE [T32HL072738, K24HL081506, R01HL067393, P50HL084923] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  3. NCRR NIH HHS [M01-RR0069, M01 RR000069, M01 RR000069-457038] Funding Source: Medline
  4. NHLBI NIH HHS [K24 HL081506, R01 HL067393-04, P50 HL084923, T32-HL072738, P50 HL084923-02, T32 HL072738, R01-HL067393, HL081506, R01 HL067393, K24-HL084923] Funding Source: Medline

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Background Pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) is the current standard for evaluating reactivity in children with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). However, PVR measures only the mean component of right ventricular afterload and neglects pulsatile effects. We recently developed and validated a method to measure pulmonary vascular input impedance, which revealed excellent correlation between the zero harmonic impedance value and PVR and suggested a correlation between higher-harmonic impedance values and pulmonary vascular stiffness. Here we show that input impedance can be measured routinely and. easily in the catheterization laboratory, that impedance provides PVR and pulmonary vascular stiffness from a single measurement, and that impedance is a better predictor of disease outcomes compared with PVR. Methods Pressure and velocity waveforms within the main pulmonary artery were measured during right heart catheterization of patients with normal pulmonary artery hemodynamics (n = 14) and those with PAH undergoing reactivity evaluation (49 subjects, 95 conditions). A correction factor needed to transform velocity into flow was obtained by calibrating against cardiac output. Input impedance was obtained off-line by dividing Fourier-transformed pressure and flow waveforms. Results Exceptional correlation was found between the indexed zero harmonic of impedance and indexed PVR (y = 1.095x + 1.381, R-2 = 0.9620). In addition, the modulus sum of the first 2 harmonics of impedance was found to best correlate with indexed pulse pressure over stroke volume (y = 13.39x - 0.8058, R-2 = 0.7962). among a subset of patients with PAH (n = 25), cumulative logistic regression between outcomes to total indexed impedance was better (R-L(2) = 0.4012) than between outcomes and indexed PVR (R-L(2) = 0.3131). Conclusions Input impedance can be consistently and easily obtained from pulse-wave Doppler and a single catheter pressure measurement, provides comprehensive characterization of the main components of RV afterload, and better predicts patient outcomes compared with PVR alone.

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