Abstract
Summary: The investigation was to elucidate the role of the reduction of extravascular pulmonary fluid in the immediate symptomatic improvement and its impact on hemodynamics in patients with mitral stenosis treated by percutaneous transluminal valvuloplasty. Methods: In a prospective study of 12 patients with severe mitral stenosis extravascular pulmonary fluid volume was determined by a combined dye and thermodilution technique (COLD Z-021 TM Version 5.x, Pulsion ®) before and after valvuloplasty. Cardiac output, left atrial pressures, atrial V-waves, diastolic transmitral gradients and their respiratory changes were measured. Dyspnea was assessed by validated questionnaires. Results: Symptomatic improvement correlated ( r=0. 808) with a decrease of extravascular lung water, but not with either an increase or a decrease of cardiac output or left atrial filling pressures. The decrease of the lung water index may be predicted from the lung water index before valvuloplasty, the final left atrial mean pressure and the cardiac index prior to intervention. The change of the mean difference between inspiratory and expiratory mitral gradient demonstrated a significant inverse correlation with the change of mean left atrial filling pressures ( r=−0.778) and with extravascular lung water after valvuloplasty ( r=−0.871). Conclusion: There is a complex relationship between left atrial filling pressures, extravascular lung water, respiratory changes of gradients, and dyspnea that need further investigation.
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