Acute pulmonary hypertension and short-term outcomes in severe Covid-19 patients needing intensive care

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Abstract

Introduction: Critically ill Covid-19 pneumonia patients are likely to develop the sequence of acute pulmonary hypertension, right ventricular (RV) strain, and eventually RV failure due to known pathophysiology (endothelial inflammation plus thrombo-embolism) that promotes increased pulmonary vascular resistance and pulmonary artery pressure. This study aimed to investigate the occurrence of acute pulmonary hypertension (aPH) as per established trans-thoracic echocardiography (TTE) criteria in Covid-19 patients receiving intensive care and to explore whether short-term outcomes are affected by the presence of aPH. Methods: Medical records were reviewed for patients treated in the intensive care units at a tertiary university hospital over a month. The presence of aPH on the TTE was noted, and plasma NTproBNP and troponin were measured as markers of cardiac failure and myocardial injury, respectively. Follow-up data were collected 21 d after the performance of TTE. Results: In total, 26 of 67 patients (39%) had an assessed systolic pulmonary artery pressure of > 35 mmHg (group aPH), meeting the TTE definition of aPH. NTproBNP levels (median [range]: 1430 [102-30 300] vs. 470 [45-29 600] ng L−1; P =.0007), troponin T levels (63 [22-352] vs. 15 [5-407] ng L−1; P =.0002), and the 21-d mortality rate (46% vs. 7%; P

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Norderfeldt, J., Liliequist, A., Frostell, C., Adding, C., Agvald, P., Eriksson, M., & Lönnqvist, P. A. (2021). Acute pulmonary hypertension and short-term outcomes in severe Covid-19 patients needing intensive care. Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 65(6), 761–769. https://doi.org/10.1111/aas.13819

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