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Pulmonary Hypertension Ellen Kantor, SRNA University of Pennsylvania N746- Summer 2013 Let’s Review… From RVpulmonic (semilunar valve)pulmonary artery From pulmonary veinLALVsystemic circulation Pulmonary vessels innervated by sympathetic nervous system Alpha adrenergic- norepinephrine causes vasoconstriction Beta adrenergic- such as isoproterenol causes vasodilation Regulation of flow is mostly passive and controlled by OXYGEN. Pulmonary Hypertension: Statistics Average age at diagnosis: 36 years Women > Men 10-15 million people/million diagnosed each year 3 year survival at time of diagnosis: approximately 50% Pulmonary Hypertension NORMAL PRESSURES: Systolic: 15-30 mmHg Diastolic: 5-15 mmHg Mean: 10-20 mmHg HYPERTENSION: Defined as a sustained pulmonary artery pressure of 40/20 mmHg and a mean pulmonary artery pressure of 25 mmHg. Pulmonary Hypertension World Health Organization (WHO) classifies into 5 groups I: idiopathic/primary pulmonary arterial hypertension V: miscellaneous pulmonary vasculature diseases IV: chronic thromboembolic disease II: pulmonary venous hypertension III: lung disease or hypoxemia What went wrong? Patients have endothelial dysfunction where there is a decrease in synthesis of vasodilators such as NO and prostacyclin but an increase in thromboxane and vascular endothelial growth factor (vasoconstrictors). Side note… Inhaled NO increased systemic O2 in hypoxemic newborns with pulmonary hypertension. Decreased need for ECMO Presenting Signs and Symptoms Symptoms are usually nonspecific Dyspnea Angina Nonproductive cough Clubbing Ring a bell?? Rarely, patients present with syncope and hemoptysis, indicating severe disease. Signs and Symptoms While providers are struggling to diagnose a cause of the patient’s nonspecific symptoms, patients can experience acute decompensation from hypoxia, hypercarbia, vasocontrictors, increased sympathetic tone (ANXIETY), and increased pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) all leading to right heart failure. Systemic effects • Any abrupt increase in PVR can lead to right heart failure or desaturation, further leading to decreased blood flow and oxygenation of the left heart, causing decreased cardiac output and ischemia. Treatment Options Supplemental O2 at home Medication management: diuretics, anticoagulants, calcium channel blockers, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, prostanoids, endothelin receptor antagonists Surgical management Lung transplant Heart/lung transplant Pulmonary Thromboendarterectomy Preoperative Management 2D ECHO: gold standard EKG X RAY Labs: CBC, CMP (include LFTs) Spirometry (PFTs) Conduct an extensive ROS to identify moderate-severe disease. Consider pre-operative Iloprost inhalation ***CONTINUE ALL MEDICATIONS ON DAY OF SURGERY Preoperative Management Intraoperative Management ***CONTINUE ALL MEDICATIONS ON DAY OF SURGERY Consider regional anesthesia, MAC Consider fiberoptic intubation Standard ASA monitors +/- ABG, a-line, central line, foley ***Any airway manipulation can cause activation of sympathetic nervous system and cause a pulmonary hypertensive crisis. MOST IMPORTANTLY: avoid pulmonary hypertensive crisis (hypoxemia, hypercarbia, metabolic acidosis, hypothermia, airway manipulation) Postoperative Management Interdisciplinary challenge Intermittent iloprost inhalation Long half life Continuous monitoring- O2 sats, pain, vital signs Consider continous regional analgesia to avoid high opioid doses Case Report #1 Case Report #2 Case Report #3 References Elkassabany NM. Should we delay surgery in the aptient with recent cocaine use? In: Fleisher LA, ed. EvidenceBased Practice of Anesthesiology. 3rd ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier Saunders; 2013. Gandhimathi K, Atkinson S, Gibson FM. Pulmonary hypertension complicating twin pregnancy: continuous spinal anaesthesia for caesarean section. International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia: 2002: 11: 301-305. Gille J, Seyfarth H, Gerlach S, et al. (2012). Perioperative anesthesiological management of patients with pulmonary hypertension. Anesthesiology Research and Practice: 2012: 1-16. Kaw R, Pasupuleti V, Deshpande A, et al. Pulmonary hypertension: an important predictor of outcomes in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery. Respiratory Medicine: 2011: 105: 619-624. Maxwell B, Pearl R, Kudelko K, et al. Airway management and perioperative decision making in the patient with severe pulmonary hypertension who requires emergency noncardiac surgery. Journal of Cardiothoracic andVascular Anesthesia: 2012: 26(5): 940-944. Roizen MF, Fleisher, LA. Anesthetic Implications of Concurrent Diseases. In: Miller RD, Eriksson LI, Fleisher LA, Wiener-Kronish JP,Young WL, eds. Miller’s Anesthesia. 7th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Churchill Livingstone; 2010: 1020-1021. Shinohara H, Hirota K, Sato M, et al. (2010). Monitored anesthesia care with dexmedetomidine of a patient with severe pulmonary arterial hypertension for inguinal hernioplasty. J Anesth: 24: 611-613. Stoelting RL. The Lungs. In: Stoelting RK, Hiller SC, eds. Pharmacology and Physiology in Anesthetic Practice. 4 th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins; 2006. Strumpher J, Jacobsohn E. Pulmonary hypertension and right ventricular dysfunction: physiology and perioperative management. Journal of Cardiothoracic andVascular Anesthesia: 2011: 25(4): 687-704.