Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Stress Doppler Echocardiography in Relatives of Patients With Idiopathic and Familial Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

2009; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 119; Issue: 13 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1161/circulationaha.108.800938

ISSN

1524-4539

Autores

Ekkehard Grünig, Sylvia Weissmann, Nicola Ehlken, Anna Fijałkowska, Christine Fischer, Thierry Fourme, Nazzareno Galiè, Hossein A. Ghofrani, Rachel E. Harrison, Sandrine Huez, Marc Humbert, Bart Janssen, Jarosław Kober, Rolf Koehler, Rajiv D. Machado, Derliz Mereles, Robert Naeije, Horst Olschewski, Steeve Provencher, Frank Reichenberger, Kathleen Retailleau, Guido Rocchi, Gérald Simonneau, Adam Torbicki, Richard C. Trembath, Werner Seeger,

Tópico(s)

Liver Disease and Transplantation

Resumo

This large, prospective, multicentric study was performed to analyze the distribution of tricuspid regurgitation velocity (TRV) values during exercise and hypoxia in relatives of patients with idiopathic and familial pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and in healthy control subjects. We tested the hypothesis that relatives of idiopathic/familial PAH patients display an enhanced frequency of hypertensive TRV response to stress and that this response is associated with mutations in the bone morphogenetic protein receptor II (BMPR2) gene.TRV was estimated by Doppler echocardiography during supine bicycle exercise in normoxia and during 120 minutes of normobaric hypoxia (FIO(2)=12%; approximately 4500 m) in 291 relatives of 109 PAH patients and in 191 age-matched control subjects. Mean maximal TRVs were significantly higher in PAH relatives during both exercise and hypoxia. During exercise, 10% of control subjects but 31.6% of relatives (P<0.0001) exceeded the 90% quantile of mean maximal TRV seen in control subjects. Hypoxia revealed hypertensive TRV in 26% of relatives (P=0.0029). Among control subjects, TRV at rest was not related to age, sex, body mass index, systemic blood pressure, smoking status, or heart rate. Within kindreds identified as harboring deleterious mutations of the BMPR2 gene, a hypertensive TRV response occurred significantly more often compared with those without detected mutations.Pulmonary hypertensive response to exercise and hypoxia in idiopathic/familial PAH relatives appears as a genetic trait with familial clustering, being correlated to but not caused by a BMPR2 mutation. The suitability of this trait to predict manifest PAH development should be addressed in long-term follow-up studies.

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