Pulmonary heart disease | |
---|---|
Other names | Cor pulmonale |
Right ventricular hypertrophy | |
Specialty | Pulmonology |
Symptoms | Cyanosis, wheezing[1] |
Causes | Primary pulmonary hypertension[2] |
Diagnostic method | EKG, Thrombophilia screen[1] |
Treatment | Vasodilators, Diuretics[3] |
Pulmonary heart disease, also known as cor pulmonale, is the enlargement and failure of the right ventricle of the heart as a response to increased vascular resistance (such as from pulmonic stenosis) or high blood pressure in the lungs.[2]
Chronic pulmonary heart disease usually results in right ventricular hypertrophy (RVH),[4] whereas acute pulmonary heart disease usually results in dilatation.[5] Hypertrophy is an adaptive response to a long-term increase in pressure. Individual muscle cells grow larger (in thickness) and change to drive the increased contractile force required to move the blood against greater resistance. Dilatation is a stretching (in length) of the ventricle in response to acute increased pressure.[6]
To be classified as pulmonary heart disease, the cause must originate in the pulmonary circulation system; RVH due to a systemic defect is not classified as pulmonary heart disease. Two causes are vascular changes as a result of tissue damage (e.g. disease, hypoxic injury), and chronic hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. If left untreated, then death may result. The heart and lungs are intricately related; whenever the heart is affected by a disease, the lungs risk following and vice versa. [citation needed]
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