Dartevelle P, Fadel E, Mussot S, Cerrina J, Leroy Ladurie F, Lehouerou D, Parquin F, Paul JF, Musset D, Humbert M, Sitbon O, Parent F, Simonneau G. Traitement chirurgical de la maladie thromboembolique pulmonaire chronique.
Presse Med 2005;
34:1475-86. [PMID:
16301979 DOI:
10.1016/s0755-4982(05)84209-5]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022] Open
Abstract
Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension is a condition that has long remained in the shadows, a kind of orphan disease, because of the lack of any curative treatment. The renewal of interest by pulmonary specialists, cardiologists and thoracic surgeon is due to the development over the past 20 years of major new treatments: lung transplantation, continuous prostacyclin infusion, and pulmonary endarterectomy, in chronological order. Most patients with postembolic pulmonary arterial hypertension (PEPAH) in a sufficiently proximal location can benefit from curative surgical treatment by bilateral endarterectomy of the pulmonary arteries. This complex surgery, performed under deep hypothermic circulatory arrest, clears out the pulmonary vascular bed down through its subsegmental branches and results in a frank reduction in pulmonary vascular resistance and normalization of cardiopulmonary function. It is a curative procedure with a perioperative mortality rate less than 7% and a definitive result, unlike pulmonary and cardiopulmonary transplantation, which have a postoperative mortality rate of 20% and a 5-year survival rate of 50%. It is difficult to recognize the postembolic nature of pulmonary hypertension because there is no known history of venous thrombosis or embolic phenomena in more than 50% of cases. Diagnosis is based on the presence of mismatched segmental defects in the radioisotopic ventilation-perfusion scanning. To be accessible to endarterectomy, lesions must involve the main, lobar, or segmental arteries. When conducted by experienced operators according to specific protocols, pulmonary (frontal and lateral views of each lung) and multislice CT angiography optimize assessment of the lesion site. When the pulmonary vascular resistance evaluated by catheterization is correlated with the anatomical obstruction visible on the images, pulmonary endarterectomy has a mortality rate below 4% and offers the patient a substantial chance to regain normal cardiorespiratory function. In cases of pulmonary arterial hypertension due to older embolisms, major arteriolitis occurs in the nonobstructed areas and aggravates the pulmonary hypertension, which may become suprasystemic. The endarterectomy mortality rate is then higher, and in specific cases justifies preoperative medical treatment. Pulmonary or cardiopulmonary transplantation is indicated in this disease only when the lesions are too distal and thus inaccessible to endarterectomy.
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