Der Internist
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The right ventricle is the stepchild of intensive care medicine. In diseases of the lung mainly when the relationship between ventilation and perfusion is disturbed, assisted respiration with positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is essential to improve oxygenation. ⋯ The effects of therapeutic measures aimed at maintaining oxygenation and ventilation partially have negative consequences for right ventricular function and encourage the development of acute cor pulmonale. They can be the cause of right-sided heart failure.
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Evidence for manifest right ventricular dysfunction is considered a critical threshold in the development of a fatal event after acute pulmonary embolism. While the acute event impressively reflects the clinical significance of right ventricular function, various disorders such as idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension, secondary pulmonary hypertension in lung diseases, carcinoid heart disease, and portopulmonary hypertension can lead to chronic right ventricular failure. Adapted treatment makes it possible to alleviate the patients' distress and presumably also improve the prognosis. ⋯ Pericardiocentesis of the tamponade provides initial hemodynamic improvement. Causal treatment is based on cytological findings and/or results of epicardial or pericardial biopsy to classify malignant and nonmalignant effusions. Cardiac surgery with pericardiolysis and (partial) pericardial resection remains the method of choice for symptomatic constrictive pericarditis.