Pulmonary Hypertension

Elevated pressure in the pulmonary arteries > 25 mmHg, resulting from an increase in pulmonary vascular resistance to blood flow through small arteries and arterioles

Aetiology

Pulmonary venous hypertension

  • Left ventricular systolic dysfunction
  • Mitral regurgitation/stenosis
  • Cardiomyopathy e.g. alcohol, viral

Pulmonary arterial hypertension

  • Primary arterial hypertension: primary disease of the pulmonary arteries/arterioles
  • Secondary arterial hypertension: occurs due to underlying disease or known risk factors, most commonly heart disease (e.g. congenital shunts) and lung fibrosis (e.g. COPD, OSA, pulmonary fibrosis)

Clinical presentation

Symptoms

  • Fatigue
  • Dyspnoea
  • Chest pain
  • Central cyanosis if hypoxic

Signs

  • Dependent oedema
  • Elevated JVP
  • Right ventricular heave at left parasternal edge
  • Murmur of tricuspid regurgitation
  • Loud P2
  • Enlarged liver (pulsatile)

Investigations

  • ECHO doppler - estimates systolic pulmonary arterial pressure
  • Right heart catheterization to confirm
  • Others: ECG (right axis deviation, RBBB), CXR (cardiomegaly)

Management

  • Depends on cause

Complications

Cor pulmonale

  • Pulmonary hypertension will increase right ventricular afterload → right ventricular hypertrophy/dilation → right sided heart failure