Abstract

BackgroundHemodynamic assessment during exercise may unmask an impaired functional reserve of the right ventricle and the pulmonary vasculature in patients with connective tissue disease. We assessed the effect of intravenous sildenafil on the hemodynamic response to exercise in patients with connective tissue disease.MethodsIn this proof-of-concept study, patients with connective tissue disease and mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) >20 mm Hg were subjected to a supine exercise hemodynamic evaluation before and after administration of intravenous sildenafil 10 mg.ResultsTen patients (four with moderately elevated mPAP 21–24 mm Hg; six with mPAP >25 mm Hg) underwent hemodynamic assessment. All of them showed markedly abnormal exercise hemodynamics. Intravenous sildenafil was well tolerated and had significant hemodynamic effects at rest and during exercise, although without pulmonary selectivity. Sildenafil reduced median total pulmonary resistance during exercise from 6.22 (IQR 4.61–8.54) to 5.24 (3.95–6.96) mm Hg·min·L-1 (p = 0.005) and increased median pulmonary arterial capacitance during exercise from 1.59 (0.93–2.28) to 1.74 (1.12–2.69) mL/mm Hg (p = 0.005).ConclusionsIn patients with connective tissue disease who have an abnormal hemodynamic response to exercise, intravenous sildenafil improved adaption of the right ventricular-pulmonary vascular unit to exercise independent of resting mPAP. The impact of acute pharmacological interventions on exercise hemodynamics in patients with pulmonary vascular disease warrants further investigation.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov NCT01889966.

Highlights

  • The importance of assessing pulmonary hemodynamics during exercise, in addition to measurements made at rest, is increasingly being recognized due its diagnostic and prognostic value in different cardiopulmonary diseases [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • We assessed the effect of intravenous sildenafil on the hemodynamic response to exercise in patients with connective tissue disease

  • In this proof-of-concept study, patients with connective tissue disease and mean pulmonary arterial pressure >20 mm Hg were subjected to a supine exercise hemodynamic evaluation before and after administration of intravenous sildenafil 10 mg

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of assessing pulmonary hemodynamics during exercise, in addition to measurements made at rest, is increasingly being recognized due its diagnostic and prognostic value in different cardiopulmonary diseases [1,2,3,4,5,6]. In this context, the changes in hemodynamic parameters during exercise provide a measure of right ventricular (RV) contractile reserve and pulmonary vascular reserve [7, 8]. Editor: Gabor Kovacs, Medizinische Universitat Graz, AUSTRIA Received: March 11, 2018 Accepted: August 29, 2018 Published: September 20, 2018

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