1658 Article Views
Publication Date: 21 May 2008
Journal: Clinical Medicine Insights: Circulatory, Respiratory and Pulmonary Medicine Clinical Medicine: Circulatory, Respiratory and Pulmonary Medicine 2008:2 59-68
Abstract Carmelle V. Remillard and Jason X.-J. Yuan
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0725.
Abstract
Demographic and hemodynamic data from patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) and chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) have not been systematically characterized to identify differences related to gender, age, race, disease severity, and drug response. Our goal was to define the distribution and relation of IPAH and CTEPH based on these criteria. Hemodynamic and demographic data from 242 IPAH patients and 90 CTEPH patients were collected and compared. IPAH incidence was greater in women, but men had a higher basal mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP). mPAP was comparable among all IPAH ethnic groups. IPAH patients with no history of fenfluramine-phentermine use had a higher mPAP than users. Exercise-induced IPAH was apparent in 14.5% of IPAH patients. Only 9% of IPAH patients responded to inhaled nitric oxide with a 20% decrease in mPAP. Compared to CTEPH patients, mPAP was greater but average age of diagnosis was lower in IPAH patients. mPAP negatively correlated with age of diagnosis in IPAH patients only. These results indicate that elevated CO is not the main determinant of mPAP in both IPAH and CTEPH patients. However, the two patient groups differ in terms of their demographic and hemodynamic distributions, and according to the correlation between mPAP and other clinical hemodynamics and demographics.
Discussion
No comments yet...Be the first to comment.
The LA experience is exactly what an author would wish for. Reviews are high quality and fast, Editors make decisions on the basis of scientific argument, and the production team is friendly and efficient.Professor Christopher F Sharpley (NSW, Australia) What our authors say
Copyright © 2010 Libertas Academica Ltd (except open access articles and accompanying metadata and supplementary files.)