Platypnea-orthodeoxia is a relatively uncommon but striking clinical syndrome characterized by dyspnea and deoxygenation accompanying a change to a sitting or standing from a recumbent position. Since Burchell et al1 described this rare syndrome over half a century ago, no more than 50 cases have been reported in the literature.Platypnea-orthodeoxia has been described to occur in pulmonary arteriovenous shunts, pulmonary parenchymal shunts (as in the hepatopulmonary syndrome), or with intra-cardiac right-to-left shunts.
Two conditions must coexist to cause platypnea-orthodeoxia: an anatomical component in the form of an interatrial communication and a functional component that produces a deformity in the atrial septum and results in a redirection of shunt flow with the assumption of an upright posture. The former may be an atrial septal defect, a patent foramen ovale, or a fenestrated atrial septal aneurysm. The latter may be cardiac, such as pericardial effusion or constrictive pericarditis; pulmonary, such as emphysema, arteriovenous malformation, pneumonectomy, or amiodarone toxicity; abdominal, such as cirrhosis of the liver or ileus; or vascular, such as aortic aneurysm or elongation.2
Under normal conditions an interatrial communication allows blood to shunt from left to right due to a higher pressure in left atrium than right atrium and a greater compliance of the right ventricle than the left ventricle. Right-to-left interatrial shunting is usually associated with spontaneous or induced pulmonary hypertension and, therefore, in the absence of a right-to-left pressure gradient, what is the mechanism for a right-to-left shunt? Or put in another way, what causes water to flow uphill?2 A persistent Eustachian valve can cause interatrial right-to-left shunting with a normal right atrial pressure.3 Platypnea-orthodeoxia could be explained on the basis of positional modification of abnormal shunting. Standing upright could stretch the interatrial communication, be it a patent foramen ovale, an atrial septal defect, or a fenestrated atrial septal aneurysm, thus allowing more streaming of venous blood from inferior vena cava through the defect, whether or not a persistent Eustachian valve coexists.3 This redirection of flow caused by an anatomic distortion of the right atrium or the atrial septum also might occur from a loculated pericardial effusion, an aortic aneurysm, or aortic elongation.2
Powered by IP2Location.com
Platypnea-orthodeoxia
August 24, 2009
New breath holding test
this new test is useful in detecting early lung abnormalities in smokers and obese people..Read more...
Travel related VTE
Long distance travel is associated with increased risk of VTE. This meta analysis suggests 3 fold increase in VTE risk. Read More..
Posted by arif at 12:26 PM View Comments
Labels: Thrombosis and Platelets, Travel
Move to top of post.Subclinical Brain Embolization in Left-Sided Infective Endocarditis
The rue incidence of infective embolization in bacterial endocarditis is not known. This study looked at these patients using MRI.
Read the abstract of this article...
Posted by arif at 12:14 PM View Comments
Labels: Cardiology, Infectious disease
Move to top of post.Drug Induced fibrotic Valve Diesase
Initial association between development of valvular heart disease and drugs based on 1960s use of methysergide and ergotamine for migraine prophylaxis
Currently implicated are the appetite suppressants fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine, the dopamine agonists pergolide and cabergoline, and the recreational drug ecstasy (MDMA)