Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
RV failure is the third most common cardiac Dx after age 50 y.
Of all CHF admissions, 10–20% have some aspect of right heart failure.
Gender predominance is male > female.
Increased risk for respiratory failure, severe right heart failure (≥10% if cor pulmonale Dx made preop)
Risk of prolonged postop ventilatory support
Increased PVR may cause systemic hypotension due to RV dysfunction, resulting in decreased LV filling
Hypoxia, hypoxemia, hypercarbia, and acidosis intraop or in early postop period, which increase PVR
Underlying CAD and LV dysfunction
Alteration in RV structure (hypertrophy) and function (decreased)
Most common cause: Long-standing LV dysfunction leading to RV failure, with other common causes including chronic pulmonary emboli and end-stage COPD resulting in increased PVR (secondary to chronic hypoxia and structural changes)
Any disease that increases PVR chronically, which can induce RV changes, including idiopathic and toxin-induced pulm Htn, pulm fibrosis, severe obstructive sleep apnea, CHD with chronic RV overload, or RV outflow obstruction
Prognosis: Favorable for those who can maintain a near-normal PaO 2 ; unfavorable for those with structural changes
LV heart failure
COPD: Smoking or severe asthma
Long-standing untreated OSA
Acute or chronic pulm embolus
CHD with RV volume overload (L-to-R shunt and long-standing pulmonic insufficiency) or afterload increase (pulm outflow obstruction)
Primary pulm Htn or severe pulm fibrosis
Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles
If you are a member. Log in here