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Thrombosis research · Jan 2013
Inefficient exercise gas exchange identifies pulmonary hypertension in chronic thromboembolic obstruction following pulmonary embolism.
- Colm McCabe, Gael Deboeck, Ian Harvey, Robert Mackenzie Ross, Deepa Gopalan, Nicholas Screaton, and Joanna Pepke-Zaba.
- Pulmonary Vascular Disease Unit, Papworth Hospital NHS Trust, Cambridge CB23 3RE, UK.
- Thromb. Res. 2013 Jan 1; 132 (6): 659-65.
IntroductionPersistent obstruction in the pulmonary artery following acute pulmonary embolism (PE) can give rise to both chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) and chronic thromboembolic disease without PH (CTED). We hypothesised that cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) may be able to differentiate patients with CTEPH and CTED following unresolved PE which may help guide patient assessment.Materials And MethodsFifteen patients with CTEPH and 15 with CTED all diagnosed after PE underwent CT pulmonary angiography, CPET and resting right heart catheterisation. Exercise variables were compared between patients with CTEPH, CTED and 10 sedentary controls and analysed as predictors of a CTEPH diagnosis. Proximal thrombotic burden in CTEPH and CTED was quantified using CT criteria.ResultsPhysiological dead space (Vd/Vt) (34.5±11.4 vs 50.8±6.6 %, p<0.001) and alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient (29±16 vs 46±12mmHg, p <0.001) at peak exercise strongly differentiated CTED and CTEPH groups respectively. Resting ventilatory efficiency also differed from control subjects. In both univariate and multivariate analyses, peak exercise Vd/Vt predicted a diagnosis of CTEPH (ROC AUC>0.88, 0.67 - 0.97) despite a similar degree of proximal thrombotic obstruction to the CTED group (67.5, 55 - 70% and 72.5, 60 - 80% respectively, p=0.08).ConclusionsGas exchange at peak exercise differentiates CTED and CTEPH after PE that can present with no apparent relation to the degree of proximal thrombotic burden. A potential role for CPET exists in guiding further clinical investigations in this setting.© 2013.
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