PH Fundamentals - Pressure Cooker Lungs
⭐ The 2018 World Symposium on PH updated the hemodynamic definition of PH to a mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) > 20 mmHg at rest.
- Hemodynamic Criteria:
- $mPAP > \textbf{20} mmHg$ (defines PH, as per above)
- For pre-capillary PH: $PAWP \le \textbf{15} mmHg$ & $PVR \ge \textbf{3} \text{ Wood units}$
- Consequence: $\uparrow$ Right Ventricular (RV) afterload $\rightarrow$ RV dysfunction.
- WHO Classification (5 Groups):
- Gr 1: Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) (Idiopathic, heritable, drug/toxin-induced)
- Gr 2: PH due to Left Heart Disease (LHD) - most common
- Gr 3: PH due to Lung Diseases/Hypoxia (COPD, ILD, OSA)
- Gr 4: Chronic Thromboembolic PH (CTEPH) & other pulmonary artery obstructions
- Gr 5: PH with unclear/multifactorial mechanisms (e.g., sarcoidosis)
- Pathophysiology Triad: Vasoconstriction, vascular proliferation/remodeling, in-situ thrombosis.

Etiology Unmasked - Tiny Troublemakers
- Congenital Heart Disease (CHD)-Associated (APAH-CHD): Most common pediatric cause.
- Systemic-to-pulmonary shunts (VSD, ASD, PDA) → ↑pulmonary blood flow & pressure.
⭐ Eisenmenger syndrome represents the most severe form of pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with congenital heart disease, characterized by a reversed (right-to-left) shunt and cyanosis.
- Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of Newborn (PPHN):
- Failure of normal postnatal circulatory transition.
- Key triggers: Meconium aspiration, RDS, sepsis, diaphragmatic hernia.
- Idiopathic PAH (IPAH): No identifiable cause.
- Other Significant Factors:
- Genetic predispositions (e.g., BMPR2 mutations).
- Chronic lung diseases (e.g., BPD, interstitial lung disease).
- Pulmonary Veno-occlusive Disease (PVOD) / Pulmonary Capillary Hemangiomatosis (PCH) - rare.
Clinical Clues - Huffy Puffy Hearts
-
Presenting Features (The "Puffs"):
- Dyspnea: Exertional, progressing to rest.
- Fatigue, poor exercise tolerance.
- Infants: Tachypnea, poor feeding, failure to thrive (FTT).
- Syncope or dizziness, particularly with exertion.
- Chest pain (angina-like), palpitations may occur.
-
Cardiac Clues (The "Huffy Heart"):
- Loud, palpable P2 (pulmonic S2).
- Right ventricular (RV) lift/heave.
- Murmurs:
- Tricuspid regurgitation (TR).
- Pulmonary regurgitation (PR - Graham Steell).
- RV failure signs (late): Hepatomegaly, edema, ascites.
-
Key Diagnostic Pointers:
- ECG: RVH (e.g., tall R V1), RAD, P pulmonale.
- CXR: Prominent main PA, RV enlargement, peripheral oligemia.

-
⭐ Echocardiography is the primary non-invasive screening tool for PH, estimating pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP) via the tricuspid regurgitation jet velocity.
- RHC: Gold standard. Confirms mPAP ≥ 25 mmHg at rest.
Management Maneuvers - Easing the Squeeze
- General Measures: Oxygen ($SpO_2$ > 92%); Diuretics (RV failure); Anticoagulation (IPAH/HPAH, Warfarin INR 2-3); Avoid triggers (high altitude); Vaccinate.
- Acute Vasoreactivity Testing (AVT): During RHC for IPAH. Uses iNO, IV epoprostenol/adenosine. Positive test predicts CCB response.
⭐ Acute vasoreactivity testing during right heart catheterization is crucial in idiopathic PAH to identify patients who may respond to long-term calcium channel blocker therapy.
- Targeted Pharmacotherapy:
- CCBs (if AVT positive): High-dose Nifedipine, Diltiazem, Amlodipine.
- If AVT negative or CCB failure (PAH-specific drugs):
- ERAs: Bosentan, Ambrisentan, Macitentan. ⚠️ Hepatotoxicity, Teratogenic.
- PDE-5 Inhibitors: Sildenafil, Tadalafil.
- Prostacyclin Pathway Agonists: Epoprostenol (IV), Treprostinil, Iloprost (inhaled).
- sGC Stimulators: Riociguat. ⚠️ Teratogenic, Hypotension.
- Combination Therapy: Frequently required for optimal outcomes.
- Interventional/Surgical: Atrial Septostomy (palliative); Lung Transplant (refractory PAH); PTE (for CTEPH).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Pulmonary Hypertension (PHT): Mean PAP ≥ 25 mmHg at rest.
- Most common cause in children: Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) with L-R shunts.
- Eisenmenger syndrome: Irreversible PHT, shunt reversal, cyanosis.
- Clinical signs: Loud P2, RV heave, exertional dyspnea.
- Gold standard diagnosis: Right heart catheterization for confirmation and severity.
- Management: Treat cause, O2, targeted therapy (e.g., sildenafil, bosentan).
- Idiopathic PHT and Eisenmenger have poor prognosis.
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