Journal of Cardiac Failure
Volume 16, Issue 3 , Pages 250-259, March 2010

Right Ventricular Heart Failure From Pulmonary Embolism: Key Distinctions From Chronic Pulmonary Hypertension

  • John A. Watts, PhD

      Affiliations

    • Emergency Medicine Research, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC
    • Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: John A. Watts, PhD, Emergency Medicine Preclinical Research, Room 302 Cannon Research Center, Carolinas Medical Center, 1542 Garden Terrace, Charlotte, NC 28203. Tel: 704 355-8427, Fax: 704 355-5620.
  • ,
  • Michael R. Marchick, MD

      Affiliations

    • Emergency Medicine Research, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC
  • ,
  • Jeffrey A. Kline, MD

      Affiliations

    • Emergency Medicine Research, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC

Received 15 September 2009; received in revised form 5 November 2009; accepted 30 November 2009. published online 18 January 2010.

Abstract 

Background

The right ventricle normally operates as a low pressure, high-flow pump connected to a high-capacitance pulmonary vascular circuit. Morbidity and mortality in humans with pulmonary hypertension (PH) from any cause is increased in the presence of right ventricular (RV) dysfunction, but the differences in pathology of RV dysfunction in chronic versus acute occlusive PH are not widely recognized.

Methods and Results

Chronic PH that develops over weeks to months leads to RV concentric hypertrophy without inflammation that may progress slowly to RV failure. In contrast, pulmonary embolism (PE) results in an abrupt vascular occlusion leading to increased pulmonary artery pressure within minutes to hours that causes immediate deformation of the RV. RV injury is secondary to mechanical stretch, shear force, and ischemia that together provoke a cytokine and chemokine-mediated inflammatory phenotype that amplifies injury.

Conclusions

This review will briefly describe causes of pulmonary embolism and chronic PH, models of experimental study, and pulmonary vascular changes, and will focus on mechanisms of right ventricular dysfunction, contrasting mechanisms of RV adaptation and injury in these 2 settings.

Key Words: Pulmonary hypertension, right ventricular hypertrophy, right ventricular failure, inflammation

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PII: S1071-9164(09)01196-8

doi:10.1016/j.cardfail.2009.11.008

Journal of Cardiac Failure
Volume 16, Issue 3 , Pages 250-259, March 2010