Pediatric cardiology
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Pediatric cardiology · Jan 1986
Pulmonary arterial changes in patients with ventricular septal defects and severe pulmonary hypertension.
In 25 patients, aged eight months to 31 years, with ventricular septal defect (VSD; isolated in 15, the others with atrial septal defect, PDA, coarctation or patent ductus arteriosus + coarctation), each with severe pulmonary artery hypertension (pulmonary artery systolic pressure [Ppa] at least 75% of systemic and an elevated pulmonary vascular resistance), we related morphologic and morphometric data from open-lung biopsy to hemodynamic measurements obtained at cardiac catheterization during the same hospital admission. Of the hemodynamic features measured, only the ratios of pulmonary-to-systemic flow and pulmonary-to-systemic resistance correlated significantly with structure. Neither pulmonary artery pressure (Ppa) nor pulmonary vascular resistance correlated significantly with any structural feature studied. ⋯ In the ten patients who underwent VSD closure, Ppa was measured postoperatively. The Heath-Edwards grade (no more than one grade-III lesion) and arterial density (at least one-half that normal for age) were the best correlates of the difference between preoperative Ppa and Ppa immediately after corrective surgery. The presurgical catheterization data, including pulmonary resistance and the resistance ratio, did not correlate significantly with change in Ppa following VSD closure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)