2014
DOI: 10.1086/677354
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Biomechanics of the Right Ventricle in Health and Disease (2013 Grover Conference Series)

Abstract: Right ventricular (RV) function is a major determinant of the symptomatology and outcome in pulmonary hypertension. The normal RV is a thin-walled flow generator able to accommodate large changes in venous return but unable to maintain flow output in the presence of a brisk increase in pulmonary artery pressure. The RV chronically exposed to pulmonary hypertension undergoes hypertrophic changes and an increase in contractility, allowing for preserved flow output in response to peripheral demand. Failure of sys… Show more

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Cited by 106 publications
(83 citation statements)
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“…Although there is no validated method to estimate RV contractile reserve, exercise or dobutamine stress echocardiography may improve prognostic evaluation by revealing changes in flow output or providing more direct measures of contractile function. In addition, during exercise or inotropic stimulation, RV function is affected by a complex interrelationship involving increased peripheral demand, sympathetic activation, increased PAP, and ventricular interactions . Grunig et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although there is no validated method to estimate RV contractile reserve, exercise or dobutamine stress echocardiography may improve prognostic evaluation by revealing changes in flow output or providing more direct measures of contractile function. In addition, during exercise or inotropic stimulation, RV function is affected by a complex interrelationship involving increased peripheral demand, sympathetic activation, increased PAP, and ventricular interactions . Grunig et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…RV functional adaptation to increased afterload is best estimated by the ratio of end‐systolic ventricular to arterial elastance calculated as the slope of end‐systolic pressure–volume relationship . However, these gold standard measurements are difficult to obtain at the bedside, and thus, simplified approaches are being developed . Although echocardiography provides a number of measures of RV function with prognostic significance in PAH, the load dependence of many of these indices does not allow accurate assessment of ventricular–arterial coupling .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The thin‐walled right ventricle pumps the entire systemic venous return into the pulmonary circulation for gas exchange. Right ventricular function integrates preload, afterload, contractility, pericardial constraint, interaction with the left ventricle, and cardiac rhythm . Venous return depends on the pressure gradient between the peripheral vasculature where the mean systemic filling pressure (although not well characterized in humans) is approximately 7–10 mmHg, and the right atrial (or central venous) pressure, which is usually 0 mmHg at rest .…”
Section: Pathophysiologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Experimental and clinical studies on right ventriculo-arterial coupling suggest a predominant role of adaptive remodeling of the right ventricle confronted with an increased afterload at least in resting conditions. Maladaptive remodeling will first occur with a too high RV afterload maintained for a prolonged time or in the presence of a systemic disease [55].…”
Section: Right Ventriculo-arterial Couplingmentioning
confidence: 99%