Pulmonary arterial hypertension or PAH is a rare disorder characterized by high blood pressure in the blood vessels of the lungs specifically the pulmonary arteries, the pulmonary arteries are blood vessels that carry blood from the right side of the heart through the lungs so when pulmonary arterial pressure rises blood backs up into the right side of the heart eventually leading to right-sided heart failure.
PAH is most often idiopathic which
means that the cause is unknown occasionally PAH can be a heritable disorder
due to mutations in genes such as the bmpr2 gene without this gene working
there's excessive proliferation or rapid reproduction of the smooth muscle
cells in blood vessels, another cause of PAH is connective tissue disorders
like scleroderma which damage the endothelial layer of the pulmonary arteries
leading to a release of vasoconstricting substances causing tightness and
narrowing of the blood vessels such as endothelin 1 thromboxane and serotonin
as well as smooth muscle hypertrophy or enlargement.
Other causes of PAH include congenital heart disease with a left to right shunts and portal hypertension characterized by increased pressure in the portal vein that leads blood from the digestive tract to the liver, the risk of PAH also increases with the usage of some stimulant drugs like cocaine and amphetamines, HIV or Human immunodeficiency virus infections and schistosomiasis are caused by parasitic flatworms called schistosomes that infect the urinary tract or intestines regardless of the cause there's vasoconstriction and thickening of pulmonary arterial walls in PAH resulting in increased resistance to blood flow. This places an added strain on the right heart as it tries pumping blood through a narrower vessel over time overloading of the right ventricle leads to right heart enlargement which in turn progresses to core pulmonale or right-sided heart failure.
PAH is a diagnosis of exclusion which means that it's diagnosed only when all other causes of pulmonary hypertension have been ruled out, the first step is to look for pulmonary hypertension through a chest x-ray which shows enlarged pulmonary arteries or an echocardiogram which typically reveals increased estimated pulmonary arterial pressure and enlarged proper ventricle tests are usually done to look for underlying causes like spirometry to look for chronic lung disease, ventilation-perfusion scan to rule out chronic thromboembolic disease and testing for autoantibodies to exclude autoimmune diseases, pulmonary arterial hypertension is confirmed through right heart catheterization to measure the pressures of the blood vessels in the lungs.
Management of PAH is accomplished through supportive as well as specific therapies, supportive therapy involves giving diuretics to control edema supplemental oxygen if needed, and occasionally anticoagulants or blood thinners like warfarin to prevent blood clots from forming, specific treatment of PAH is done with medications that dilate blood vessels by broadly targeting three pathways known to be important in PAH. The first is the prostacyclin pathway and medicines in this class are epiprostanol, traprostonil, iloprost, and celexapag, the second is the endothelin pathway with drugs such as ambry, sentine, bosentin, and masatentin, and lastly, there is the nitric oxide pathway that includes sildenafil, tedalopil, and ryociguat. Finally, individuals with advanced irreversible diseases may require double lung transplantation.
Alright as a quick recap pulmonary arterial
hypertension or PAH is a rare disorder characterized by high blood pressure and
pulmonary arteries individuals with PAH experience symptoms like difficulty
breathing, fatigue, weakness, chest pain, dizziness, and syncope, advanced
disease may present with hemoptysis hoarseness signs of right heart failure and
cyanosis. PAH is most often idiopathic and is a diagnosis of exclusion made
after diagnosing pulmonary hypertension through transthoracic echocardiogram or
cardiac catheterization, treatment involves supportive therapy as needed like diuretics
and supplemental oxygen and specific treatment with medications that dilate
blood vessels.
Thank you