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Response to exercise in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension treated with combination therapy.

Mari NishizakiAiko OgawaHiromi Matsubara
Published in: ERJ open research (2021)
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH)-specific combination therapy improves pulmonary haemodynamics at rest in patients with PAH; nevertheless, exertional dyspnoea remains. We investigated pulmonary haemodynamic response to exercise, and the relationship to ventilatory efficiency and hypoxaemia in patients with PAH treated with combination therapy. 32 clinically stable patients with PAH undergoing combination therapy underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing with right heart catheterisation. Haemodynamic impairment was moderate to severe before treatment. However, after treatment it was significantly improved, and the mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) at rest was <25 mmHg in 13 patients. The mPAP increased significantly from 27.9±10.7 to 45.9±16.7 mmHg (p<0.01) during exercise. The cardiac index increased inadequately, and the total pulmonary resistance (TPR) increased significantly from 5.74±3.42 to 6.58±3.82 Wood units (p<0.01). The mPAP/cardiac output (CO) slope was steep (10.0±6.7 mmHg·min·L-1). It significantly correlated with both the minute ventilation/carbon dioxide output slope (r=0.51, p<0.01) and peripheral arterial oxygen saturation/workload slope (r=-0.41, p=0.02). In addition, the mPAP/CO slope correlated significantly with mPAP at rest (r=0.73, p<0.01) and TPR at rest (r=0.64, p<0.01). Even after pulmonary haemodynamics at rest was significantly improved in PAH patients with PAH-specific combination therapy, the mPAP/CO slope was steep and the steep mPAP/CO slope related to decreased ventilatory efficiency and the severity of hypoxaemia. The mPAP/CO slope was steeper in patients with higher mPAP and TPR at rest.
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