Critical Care

official impact factor 4.60

Open Access Highly Access Research

Pulmonary capillary pressure in pulmonary hypertension

Rogerio Souza*, Marcelo BP Amato, Sergio E Demarzo, Daniel Deheinzelin, Carmen SV Barbas, Guilherme PP Schettino and Carlos RR Carvalho

Author Affiliations

Pulmonary Division, Respiratory ICU – Heart Institute (InCor), University of São Paulo Medical School, São Paulo, Brazil

For all author emails, please log on.

Critical Care 2005, 9:R132-R138 doi:10.1186/cc3038

Published: 11 February 2005

Abstract

Introduction

Pulmonary capillary pressure (PCP), together with the time constants of the various vascular compartments, define the dynamics of the pulmonary vascular system. Our objective in the present study was to estimate PCPs and time constants of the vascular system in patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH), and compare them with these measures in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).

Methods

We conducted the study in two groups of patients with pulmonary hypertension: 12 patients with IPAH and 11 with ARDS. Four methods were used to estimate the PCP based on monoexponential and biexponential fitting of pulmonary artery pressure decay curves.

Results

PCPs in the IPAH group were considerably greater than those in the ARDS group. The PCPs measured using the four methods also differed significantly, suggesting that each method measures the pressure at a different site in the pulmonary circulation. The time constant for the slow component of the biexponential fit in the IPAH group was significantly longer than that in the ARDS group.

Conclusion

The PCP in IPAH patients is greater than normal but methodological limitations related to the occlusion technique may limit interpretation of these data in isolation. Different disease processes may result in different times for arterial emptying, with resulting implications for the methods available for estimating PCP.