Deaths from Primary Pulmonary HypertensionPrimary pulmonary hypertension has no cure. If left untreated, the right side of the heart becomes overworked and eventually fails, leading to death. One study showed that 30% of untreated PPH patients died within 3 years of diagnosis. New treatments for PPH, developed during the 1990's, have helped to relieve the symptoms and improve the quality of life of PPH patients.
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What is primary pulmonary hypertension (or unexplained pulmonary hypertension)? Primary or unexplained pulmonary hypertension (PPH) is a rare lung disorder in which the blood pressure in the pulmonary artery rises far above normal levels for no apparent reason. The pulmonary artery is a blood vessel carrying oxygen-poor blood from the right ventricle (one of the heart's pumping chambers) to the lungs. In the lungs, the blood picks up oxygen, then flows to the heart's left side, where the left ventricle pumps it to the rest of the body through the aorta. Hypertension is a medical term for abnormally high blood pressure. Normal average (also called "mean") pulmonary artery pressure is about 14 mm Hg at rest. In patients with PPH, the average blood pressure in the pulmonary artery is greater than 25 mm Hg at rest and greater than 30 mm Hg during exercise. This abnormally high pressure (pulmonary hypertension) is linked with changes in the small blood vessels in the lungs. These changes increase resistance to blood flowing through the vessels. This increased resistance puts a strain on the right ventricle, which now must work harder than usual to move enough blood through the lungs.
What causes primary pulmonary hypertension? We don't know the cause; there may be one or more causes. The low incidence makes learning more about the disease extremely difficult. Studies of PPH also have been difficult because a good animal model of the disease hasn't been available. We think that in most people who develop primary pulmonary hypertension, the blood vessels are very sensitive to certain factors that trigger this disease to develop.
What are the symptoms of primary pulmonary hypertension?
One of the great difficulties in treating PPH is that the diagnosis is often delayed due to the slowly progressive and insidious onset of the symptoms. How is a patient with primary pulmonary hypertension evaluated? Significant advances in PPH therapy over the past decade have markedly affected the survival and quality of life for people with this disease. The optimal medical and/or surgical treatment for patients with PPH depends upon a thorough evaluation at a medical center with expertise in pulmonary hypertension. The evaluation includes a right heart cardiac catheterization. In this procedure the doctor places a thin, flexible tube (a catheter) through an artery or vein in the patient's arm, leg or neck, then threads it into the right ventricle and pulmonary artery. This is the only way to measure the pressure in the pulmonary artery and find out what medical therapy is appropriate for a given patient. What therapy is available for patients with primary pulmonary hypertension? Doctors can choose from a variety of drugs that help lower blood pressure in the lungs and improve heart performance in many patients. Physicians now know that patients with PPH respond differently to the different medications that dilate or relax blood vessels and that no one drug is consistently effective in all patients. Because individual reactions vary, different drugs have to be tried before chronic or long-term treatment begins. During the course of the disease, the amount and type of medicine also may have to be changed. To find out which medicine works best for a particular patient, doctors evaluate the drugs during cardiac catheterization.
Besides oral calcium channel blockers and chronic intravenous prostacyclin, clinical trials are under way to evaluate new drugs to improve the treatment of PPH. Some patients also do well by taking medicines that make the right ventricle's work easier.
Transplantation (heart-lung or lung) is reserved for patients who don't respond to medical therapy. The decision whether a patient requires heart-lung transplantation or lung transplantation is made after a thorough evaluation at a lung transplantation center. What are the long-term prospects for patients with primary pulmonary hypertension? Despite the complexity of some of the various medical therapies, accurate, early diagnosis and initiation of treatment have saved the lives of many patients with PPH. With optimal medical and/or surgical therapy, patients can often return to a virtually normal lifestyle, including running a household, returning to school and participating in many physical activities. Most doctors and patients agree that it's very important for both patients and families to be as informed as possible. This lets everyone understand the illness and apply the information to what is happening. In addition to family and close friends, support groups can help PPH patients. More information is available from these organizations: Pulmonary Hypertension Association (PHA) PPH Cure Foundation Despite physicians' inability to cure primary pulmonary hypertension, advances in its treatment over the past decade have markedly improved survival and the quality of life for people with PPH. Much of the research and development of treatments have focused on PPH. However, these same treatments are now being evaluated in many patients with pulmonary hypertension due to other causes, such as congenital heart disease or disorders such as scleroderma or systemic lupus erythematosus. See also: |
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Primary pulmonary hypertension is a relatively rare lung disorder with an estimated 500 to 1,000 new cases being diagnosed each year in the United States. The greatest number of PPH cases are reported in women from ages 20 to 40, but men, women and children of all ages can develop this disease. In the calendar year 2000, there were 163,000 hospital discharges in which one of the diagnoses was primary pulmonary hypertension (PPH). There is no cure for primary pulmonary hypertension, but treatments can provide great benefits to PPH patients. |