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Chest, Vol 75, 656-662, Copyright © 1979 by American College of Chest Physicians
ARTICLES |
E Weitzenblum, A Loiseau, C Hirth, R Mirhom and J Rasaholinjanahary
Eighty-five patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, mainly chronic bronchitis (71 patients), who had arterial hypoxemia and moderate to severe obstruction of the airways underwent at least two right cardiac catheterizations in a clinical steady state, with a delay of three years or more between the first and the last catheterization. The average delay was 60 +/- 19 months (range, 36 to 119 months). Patients were regularly examined (quarterly clinical and functional checkups). The changes in pulmonary hemodynamic data were small. In the group of 53 patients with an initial mean pulmonary arterial pressure of 20 mm Hg or less, this pressure varied from 15.4 +/- 3.1 to 18.3 +/- 6.6 mm Hg (P less than 0.001); in the group of 32 patients with an initial mean pulmonary arterial pressure greater than 20 mm Hg, this pressure varied from 27.7 +/- 6.0 to 31.0 +/- 9.3 mm Hg (P less than 0.05). The mean pulmonary arterial pressure increased by 5 mm Hg or more in only 28 patients. In these patients with hemodynamic "worsening," the final arterial oxygen pressure (PaO2) was lower and the final arterial carbon dioxide tension was higher than in the remaining patients. A significant negative correlation (r = -0.39; P less than 0.001) was observed between changes in PaO2 and mean pulmonary arterial pressure. There was a generally good agreement between the course of pulmonary hemodynamics (mean pulmonary arterial pressure), on the one hand, and the clinical, radiologic (transverse diameter of the heart), and electrocardiographic evolution, on the other hand. In the 33 patients who died, a relatively long survival was observed after the first episode of right-sided heart failure or after ascertaining pulmonary hypertension.
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