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Cardiology in review · Mar 2010
ReviewPulmonary arterial hypertension in connective tissue diseases.
- Avram Goldberg.
- North Shore-LIJ Health System, Lake Success, NY 11042, USA. augoldbe@lij.edu
- Cardiol Rev. 2010 Mar 1; 18 (2): 85-8.
AbstractPulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is an entity that is known to complicate connective tissue diseases (CTD). PAH in CTD is a very important diagnosis which greatly affects treatment and prognosis. The most commonly affected CTD is scleroderma, although lupus, inflammatory myopathies such as poly and dermatomyositis, and mixed CTD are also associated with PAH. The manifestations of PAH have both similarities and differences when occurring in the setting of CTD as compared with idiopathic PAH. These differences are most notable in scleroderma. In this section we will discuss the features of PAH as they appear in CTDs, and in particular, scleroderma. The focus of this article is an approach to the diagnosis and treatment of PAH in CTD, and how this setting might differ from idiopathic and other forms of PAH.
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