Does exercise hemodynamics improve the diagnosis of early HFpEF in euvolemic patients with exertional dyspnea, normal BNP, and normal resting cardiac filling pressures?
Euvolemic patients with exertional dyspnea, normal brain natriuretic peptide, and normal cardiac filling pressures at rest
Exercise hemodynamics
Diagnosis of early heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF)
Exercise hemodynamics may enable earlier and more accurate diagnosis of HFpEF in patients with unexplained exertional dyspnea and normal resting hemodynamics.
Background—: When advanced, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is readily apparent. However, diagnosis of earlier disease may be challenging because exertional dyspnea is not specific for heart failure, and biomarkers and hemodynamic indicators of volume overload may be absent at rest. Methods and Results—: Patients with exertional dyspnea and ejection fraction >50% were referred for hemodynamic catheterization. Those with no significant coronary disease, normal brain natriuretic peptide assay, and normal resting hemodynamics (mean pulmonary artery pressure <25 mm Hg and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure PCWP <15 mm Hg) (n=55) underwent exercise study. The exercise PCWP was used to classify patients as having HFpEF (PCWP ≥25 mm Hg) (n=32) or noncardiac dyspnea (PCWP <25 mm Hg) (n=23). At rest, patients with HFpEF had higher resting pulmonary artery pressure and PCWP, although all values fell within normal limits. Exercise-induced elevation in PCWP in HFpEF was confirmed by greater increases in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and was associated with blunted increases in heart rate, systemic vasodilation, and cardiac output. Exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension was present in 88% of patients with HFpEF and was related principally to elevated PCWP, as pulmonary vascular resistances dropped similarly in both groups. Exercise PCWP and pulmonary artery systolic pressure were highly correlated. An exercise pulmonary artery systolic pressure ≥45 mm Hg identified HFpEF with 96% sensitivity and 95% specificity. Conclusions—: Euvolemic patients with exertional dyspnea, normal brain natriuretic peptide, and normal cardiac filling pressures at rest may have markedly abnormal hemodynamic responses during exercise, suggesting that chronic symptoms are related to heart failure. Earlier and more accurate diagnosis using exercise hemodynamics may allow better targeting of interventions to treat and prevent HFpEF progression.
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Barry A. Borlaug
Rick A. Nishimura
Paul Sorajja
Circulation Heart Failure
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic in Arizona
Mayo Clinic in Florida
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Borlaug et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a3c745931f91e38f68c8df — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/circheartfailure.109.930701