Abstract

Transthoracic echocardiography is the first-line imaging modality in the assessment of right-sided valve disease. The principle objectives of the echocardiographic study are to determine the aetiology, mechanism and severity of valvular dysfunction, as well as consequences on right heart remodelling and estimations of pulmonary artery pressure. Echocardiographic data must be integrated with symptoms, to inform optimal timing and technique of interventions. The most common tricuspid valve abnormality is regurgitation secondary to annular dilatation in the context of atrial fibrillation or left-sided heart disease. Significant pulmonary valve disease is most commonly seen in congenital heart abnormalities. The aetiology and mechanism of tricuspid and pulmonary valve disease can usually be identified by 2D assessment of leaflet morphology and motion. Colour flow and spectral Doppler are required for assessment of severity, which must integrate data from multiple imaging planes and modalities. Transoesophageal echo is used when transthoracic data is incomplete, although the anterior position of the right heart means that transthoracic imaging is often superior. Three-dimensional echocardiography is a pivotal tool for accurate quantification of right ventricular volumes and regurgitant lesion severity, anatomical characterisation of valve morphology and remodelling pattern, and procedural guidance for catheter-based interventions. Exercise echocardiography may be used to elucidate symptom status and demonstrate functional reserve. Cardiac magnetic resonance and CT should be considered for complimentary data including right ventricular volume quantification, and precise cardiac and extracardiac anatomy. This British Society of Echocardiography guideline aims to give practical advice on the standardised acquisition and interpretation of echocardiographic data relating to the pulmonary and tricuspid valves.

Highlights

  • Guidance for the echocardiographic assessment of the right side of the heart has historically been lacking when compared to the left heart

  • Valvular defects may broadly be classified as primary, where there is inherent pathology of the valve apparatus itself, or secondary, where a structurally normal valve is distorted by anatomical changes in the right atrium (RA), right ventricular (RV) or outflow tract (RVOT), tricuspid valve annulus (TVA), or pulmonary artery (PA)

  • A standardised imaging display of the transversal cut planes is recommended, with the LV outflow tract at 12 o’clock regardless of whether the perspective is from the RA or RV [42]

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Summary

GUIDELINES AND RECOMMENDATIONS

Echocardiographic assessment of the tricuspid and pulmonary valves: a practical guideline from the British Society of Echocardiography. Abbas Zaidi MD1, David Oxborough PhD2,3, Daniel X Augustine MD4,5, Radwa Bedair MD6, Allan Harkness MSc7, Bushra Rana MBBS8, Shaun Robinson MSc9 and Luigi P Badano MD PhD10,11 on behalf of the Education Committee of the British Society of Echocardiography

Introduction
General principles and terminology
Tricuspid valve
Pulmonary valve
Tricuspid valve disease
Pulmonary valve disease
Assessment of severity of tricuspid and pulmonary valve disease
Colour flow Doppler
Spectral Doppler
Impact on the RV and pulmonary circulation
Transoesophageal echocardiography
3DE for right ventricular volume quantification
3DE of the pulmonary valve
3DE of the tricuspid valve
Stress echocardiography
Role of other imaging modalities
Explanatory notes
TR Vmax
PR deceleration time PR index
TV tenting area TV tenting height
TR jet area
TV inflow
TV inflow mean pressure gradient
TR effective
RV S’
HV systolic reversal waves
Key messages
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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