Authors
John J Ryan, Jessica Huston, Shelby Kutty, Nathan D Hatton, Lindsay Bowman, Lian Tian, Julia E Herr, Amer M Johri, Stephen L Archer
Publication date
2015/4/1
Source
Canadian Journal of Cardiology
Volume
31
Issue
4
Pages
391-406
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is an obstructive pulmonary vasculopathy, characterized by excess proliferation, apoptosis resistance, inflammation, fibrosis, and vasoconstriction. Although PAH therapies target some of these vascular abnormalities (primarily vasoconstriction), most do not directly benefit the right ventricle (RV). This is suboptimal because a patient's functional state and prognosis are largely determined by the success of the adaptation of the RV to the increased afterload. The RV initially hypertrophies but might ultimately decompensate, becoming dilated, hypokinetic, and fibrotic. A number of pathophysiologic abnormalities have been identified in the PAH RV, including: ischemia and hibernation (partially reflecting RV capillary rarefaction), autonomic activation (due to G protein receptor kinase 2-mediated downregulation and desensitization of β-adrenergic receptors), mitochondrial-metabolic …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JJ Ryan, J Huston, S Kutty, ND Hatton, L Bowman… - Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 2015