Abstract

With the advent of balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA) for non-surgical chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) patients, there is renewed interest in the pulmonary angiography technique. This technique is still the standard imaging modality to confirm CTEPH, which, in addition, helps to determine the most appropriate treatment. Furthermore, learning this technique fulfills two main purposes: to identify BPA candidates and to provide the operator with the catheter handling needed to perform BPA. Operators interested in performing BPA must learn not only the pulmonary arteries’ anatomy, but also which are the best angiographic projections and the most suitable catheters to canalize and display each segmental branch. Unfortunately, this information is scarce in the literature. With this goal, learning the diagnostic pulmonary angiography technique can be a first step on the way to perform BPA. Although there are descriptions on how to perform a pulmonary angiography with balloon-tipped catheters and the digital subtraction technique, this technique does not provide operators with the catheter knowledge and manual skill needed to cannulate each segmental branch. In contrast, learning the conventional selective segmental pulmonary angiography (SSPA) technique provides the operator with this knowledge and skills. In this review, based on the experience of the authors, we describe the pulmonary arteries’ anatomy and detail the practical aspects of the SSPA procedure, with the aim of providing operators with the anatomical and technical knowledge needed to perform BPA. We also summarize the contemporary complications of SSPA in CTEPH patients at a reference center.

Highlights

  • The advent of balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA) for patients with non-surgical chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) has raised interest in the invasive pulmonary angiography technique [1]

  • Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) has been considered the gold standard for characterizing vessel morphology in CTEPH [2], it is being challenged by advances in non-invasive modalities like computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA)

  • The pulmonary artery (PA) anatomy description and the technical aspects described below are based on our experience of 452 selective segmental pulmonary angiography (SSPA) cases and of 450 BPA cases performed by the cath-lab members of a referral CTEPH center

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Summary

Introduction

The advent of balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA) for patients with non-surgical chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) has raised interest in the invasive pulmonary angiography technique [1]. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) has been considered the gold standard for characterizing vessel morphology in CTEPH [2], it is being challenged by advances in non-invasive modalities like computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA). Both techniques can identify surgically accessible chronic clots [3,4]. We describe in detail the pulmonary arteries’ anatomy, provide recommendations regarding the practical aspects of the SSPA technique and report contemporary procedural complications in patients with severe PH due to CTEPH in an expert center. The pulmonary artery (PA) anatomy description and the technical aspects described below are based on our experience of 452 SSPA cases and of 450 BPA cases performed by the cath-lab members of a referral CTEPH center

Pulmonary Arteries’ Anatomy
Venous Access
Catheter Selection and Positioning
Selective Segmental Pulmonary Angiography Complications
Findings
10. Conclusions
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