Abstract
Fourteen patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, mild to moderate pulmonary hypertension, and diminished right ventricular (RV) ejection fraction were studied acutely with use of a combined radionuclide-hemodynamic approach to assess and contrast the effects of 3 vasodilators on RV performance and central hemodynamic function. Nitroglycerin significantly decreased mean right atrial pressure, RV end-diastolic volume index, mean pulmonary artery pressure, cardiac index, and arterial oxygen tension, but did not affect pulmonary vascular resistance index and increased RV ejection fraction. Nitroprusside had similar effects on mean right atrial pressure, RV end-diastolic volume index, mean pulmonary artery pressure, cardiac index, and arterial oxygen tension, but also mildly decreased pulmonary vascular resistance index and did not alter RV ejection fraction. In contrast, hydralazine decreased pulmonary vascular resistance index and increased cardiac index and RV ejection fraction. The increase in ejection fraction correlated well with the decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance. These data suggest that in patients with mild to moderate secondary pulmonary hypertension, acute administration of hydralazine results in a substantial improvement in RV performance by virtue of decreasing pulmonary vascular resistance. In contrast, nitroglycerin and nitroprusside demonstrate predominant effects that reduce preload, cardiac index, and arterial oxygen tension. Based on these data, afterload reduction with vasodilators such as hydralazine may be potentially useful in selected patients with pulmonary disease and secondary pulmonary hypertension and appear preferable to agents that primarily reduce preload. Further long-term studies are necessary to establish therapeutic efficacy.
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