Determinants of Right Ventricular Performance in Severe Acute Pulmonary Embolism.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

9-2025

Publication Title

Journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Severe acute pulmonary embolism (PE) induces hemodynamic compromise due to a failing right ventricle (RV) and a "dry" hyperdynamic left ventricle (LV). RV systolic dysfunction is the key parameter to determine acute PE risk stratification, clinical management, and prognosis. The present study delineates the determinants of RV performance in acute PE resulting in RV dysfunction.

METHODS: This was a single-center, retrospective analysis of a high-volume PE response team database of patients with intermediate-high-risk or high-risk PE with an echocardiogram prior to escalation of care.

RESULTS: The RV free wall motion (total RVFW motion score = 8.1 ± 2.8) was correlated with the magnitude of RV systolic depression (RV fractional area change [FAC] = 29 ± 13%, tricuspid annular planar systolic excursion = 1.57 ± 0.49 cm, and S' velocity = 10.57 ± 3.14 cm/s). LV preload and stroke volume were markedly reduced (LV end diastolic size = 4.04 ± 0.68 cm and volume = 73.6 ± 25.8 mL; LV stroke volume = 46.2 ± 16.6 mL). LV preload deprivation was correlated with the severity of RV systolic dysfunction (total RVFW motion score,

CONCLUSIONS: Afterload strain imposed by PE may induce severe RV systolic dysfunction attributable to marked RVFW dysfunction. RV systolic pressure generation and transpulmonary flow are generated through systolic ventricular interactions mediated by primary septal contraction and paradoxical septal motion.

Volume

4

Issue

9

First Page

103868

Last Page

103868

DOI

10.1016/j.jscai.2025.103868

ISSN

2772-9303

PubMed ID

41040435

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