Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2024)

Pulmonary Artery Dilatation Due to Pressure or Volume Overload in Congenital Heart Disease

  • Monika Kaldararova,
  • Katarina Bobocka,
  • Andrea Kantorova,
  • Erika Drangova,
  • Jana Polakova Mistinova,
  • Filip Klauco,
  • Tereza Hlavata,
  • Adriana Reptova,
  • Tatiana Valkovicova,
  • Iveta Simkova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13061567
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. 1567

Abstract

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Background: Pulmonary artery dilatation is described mostly in association with pulmonary hypertension. Patients/Methods: Study analysis: 60 patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension in congenital heart disease (PAH-CHD); 64 with repaired tetralogy of Fallot/pulmonary regurgitation (rTOF/PR); and 80 healthy (NORMAL). Measured were: main pulmonary artery (MPA) diameter and MPA/ascending aorta (Ao asc) ratio, by echocardiography (ECHO) and computer tomography or magnetic resonance imaging (CT/MRI). Results: In MPA diameter, significant differences between PAH-CHD, rTOF/PR, and NORMAL were found (median): 37 vs. 27 vs. 21 mm (p p p = 0.3). Significant MPA dilatation (>40 mm) was present: in PAH-CHD, 35% (ECHO) and 76.9% (CT/MRI) of patients, while in rTOF/PR, 3.1% (ECHO) and 7.8% (CT/MRI). Severe MPA dilatation (>50 mm) occurred only in PAH-CHD: 16.7% (ECHO) and 31.4% (CT/MRI), while not in rTOF/PR. There was a significant correlation between ECHO and CT/MRI measurements, but ECHO was underestimated in all parameters. Conclusions: MPA dilatation due to pressure overload is more frequent and more severe; volume overload also leads to MPA dilatation but is less severe. The MPA/Ao asc ratio is not reliable for MPA dilatation estimation in rTOF/PR.

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