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PULMONARY HYPERTENSION IN THE NEONATES DR RAJESH 23/04/08 Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (PPHN) Is a major clinical problem in the neonatal ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PULMONARY HYPERTENSION IN THE NEONATES


1
PULMONARY HYPERTENSION IN THE NEONATES
  • DR RAJESH
  • 23/04/08

2
Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn
(PPHN)
  • Is a major clinical problem in the neonatal
    intensive care unit.
  • Can contribute significantly to morbidity and
    mortality in both term and preterm infants.
  • Hypoxemic respiratory failure or PPHN can place
    newborns at risk for death, neurologic injury,
    and other morbidities.
  • Incidence is estimated at 0.2 of liveborn term
    infants

3
Definition
  • Severe hypoxemic respiratory failure associated
    with right-to-left shunting of blood across the
    foramen ovale and/or patent ductus arteriosus.

4
CYCLE OF EVENTS OFTEN PRESENT IN THE SICK NEWBORN
INFANT
5
PPHN Classification
  • Parenchymal lung disease (meconium aspiration
    syndrome, respiratory distress syndrome, sepsis)
  • Idiopathic (or "black-lung")
  • Pulmonary hypoplasia (as seen in congenital
    diaphragmatic hernia).

6
Diagnosis
  • The clinical diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension
    is considered when there is hypoxemia refractory
    to oxygen therapy or lung recruitment strategies
    (PaO2 lt 55 despite FiO2 of 1.0)
  • Associated with a preductal to postductal oxygen
    gradient greater than 20 mm Hg
  • The echocardiographic diagnosis of PPHN is made
    by demonstrating the presence of extrapulmonary
    right to left shunting at the ductal or atrial
    level in the absence of severe pulmonary
    parenchymal disease with Doppler evidence of
    tricuspid regurgitation
  • During cardiac catheterization, pulmonary
    hypertension is defined as pulmonary arterial
    pressure greater than 25 - 30 mm Hg

7
Diagnosis differential cyanosis
  • PaO2 Right radial, descending aorta (DA) -
    simultaneous PaO2 Right radial exceeds DA PaO2 by
    10-20 mmHg in persistent pulmonary hypertension
  • Pulse oximetry Preductal (right finger) oxygen
    saturation (SaO2) exceeds postductal (toe) SaO2
    by 5

8
Hyperventilation Hyperoxia Test
9
Normal Pulmonary Vascular Transition
  • The pulmonary vascular transition at birth is
    characterized by
  • rapid increase in pulmonary blood flow
  • reduction in PVR
  • clearance of lung liquid.

10
Central role in the pulmonary vascular transition
  • Pulmonary endothelial cells
  • NO
  • Arachidonic acid metabolites

11
Nitric oxide (NO) and prostacyclin (PG) signaling
pathways in regulation of vascular tone
12
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13
NO
  • NO production increases dramatically at the time
    of birth.
  • Pulmonary expression of both endothelial nitric
    oxide synthase
  • (e NOS) and its downstream target, soluble
    guanylate cyclase (sGC),
  • increases during late gestation.

14
NO
  • Ultimately, increased NO production and sGC
    activity lead to
  • increased cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)
    concentrations
  • in vascular smooth muscle cells, which produce
    vasorelaxation via
  • decreasing intracellular calcium concentrations.

15
PROSTACYCLIN PATHWAY
  • Cyclooxygenase (COX) is the rate-limiting enzyme
    that generates
  • prostacyclin from arachidonic acid.
  • COX-1 in particular is upregulated during late
    gestation.

16
PROSTACYCLIN PATHWAY
  • There is evidence that the increase in estrogen
    concentrations in late gestation play a role in
    upregulating PGI synthesis. This leads to an
    increase in prostacyclin production in late
    gestation and early postnatal life.
  • Prostacyclin interacts with adenylate cyclase to
    increase intracellular cyclic adenosine
    monophosphate levels, which leads to
    VASORELAXATION.

17
At the time of birth, multiple factors regulate
these pathways
  • mechanical distention of the lung
  • a decrease in carbon dioxide tension
  • an increase in oxygen tension in the lungs

18
  • Oxygen stimulates the activity of both eNOS and
    COX-1 immediately after birth, leading to
    increased levels of NO and prostacyclin.
  • Oxygen also stimulates the release of adenosine
    triphosphate from oxygenated red blood cells,
    which increases the activity of both eNOS and
    COX-1

19
Mechanisms of Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension
of the Newborn
  • Abnormally Constricted Pulmonary
    Vasculature-Meconium Aspiration
    Syndrome-Pneumonia-Respiratory Distress
    Syndrome
  • Structurally Abnormal Pulmonary
    Vasculature-Idiopathic Persistent Pulmonary
    Hypertension ("black lung PPHN")
  • Hypoplastic Pulmonary Vasculature-Congenital
    Diaphragmatic Hernia-Pulmonary Hypoplasia

20
Parenchymal Lung Disease MAS
  • the most common cause of PPHN
  • approximately 13 of all live births are
    complicated by meconium-stained fluid, only 5 of
    affected infants subsequently develop MAS
  • The traditional belief is that aspiration occurs
    with the first breath after birth, but more
    recent data suggest that for the more severely
    affected infants, aspiration more likely occurs
    in utero.

21
Parenchymal Lung Disease MAS
  • Meconium aspiration injures the lung through
    multiple mechanisms
  • mechanical obstruction of the airways .
  • chemical pneumonitis due to inflammation,
    activation of complement .
  • inactivation of surfactant .
  • vasoconstriction of pulmonary vessels.
  • acts as an airway obstruction with a "ball-valve"
    effect, preventing adequate ventilation in the
    immediate postnatal period.

22
Parenchymal Lung Disease MAS
  • Meconium has toxic effects in the lungs that are
    mediated by inflammation.
  • -Within hours of the meconium aspiration event,
    neutrophils and macrophages are found in the
    alveoli and lung parenchyma.
  • -The release of cytokines such as tumor necrosis
    factor-alpha, interleukin 1-beta (IL-1-beta), and
    IL-8 may injure the lung parenchyma directly and
    lead to vascular leakage that causes pneumonitis
    with pulmonary edema.

23
Parenchymal Lung Disease MAS
  • Meconium injury may trigger directly the
    postnatal release of vasoconstrictors such as
    ET-1, TXA2, and PGE2.
  • Meconium also inactivates surfactant, due to the
    presence of surfactant inhibitors such as
    albumin, phosphatidylserine, and phospholipase A2

24
Parenchymal Lung Disease MAS
  • -The pneumonitis and surfactant inactivation
    impair adequate ventilation immediately after
    birth, which is a key mediator of normal
    pulmonary transition.
  • -Such impairment of normal transition in
    combination with the postnatal release of
    vasoconstrictors ultimately leads to the
    pulmonary hypertension seen in conjunction with
    MAS.

25
Idiopathic PPHN
  • Idiopathic (or "black lung") PPHN is most common
    in term and near-term (gt34 weeks gestation)
    newborns.
  • -Means significant remodeling of the pulmonary
    vasculature, with vessel wall thickening and
    smooth muscle hyperplasia.
  • -The smooth muscle extends to the level of the
    intra-acinar arteries

26
Idiopathic PPHN
  • affected infants do not vasodilate their
    pulmonary
  • vasculature appropriately in response to
    birth-related
  • stimuli, and they present with profound hypoxemia
    and
  • clear, hyperlucent lung fields on radiography,
    thus the
  • term "black lung" PPHN.

27
Idiopathic PPHN
  • The pathophysiology
  • 1) constriction of the fetal ductus arteriosus in
    utero from exposure to nonsteroidal
    anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) during the third
    trimester.
  • 2) biologic or genetic susceptibility .
  • 3) reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as
    superoxide and hydrogen peroxide may play a role
    in the vasoconstriction and vascular remodeling
    associated with PPHN.

28
Hypoplastic pulmonary vasculature- CDH
  • CDH occurs in 1 of every 2,000 to 4,000 live
    births -accounts for 8 of all major congenital
    anomalies.
  • CDH is a developmental abnormality of
    diaphragmatic development that results in a
    defect that allows abdominal viscera to enter the
    chest and compress the lung.

29
Hypoplastic pulmonary vasculature- CDH
  • -Herniation - most often in the posterolateral
    segments of the diaphragm, and 80 of the
    defects- on the left side.
  • -CDH is characterized by a variable degree of
    pulmonary hypoplasia associated with a decrease
    in cross-sectional area of the pulmonary
    vasculature.

30
Treatment of PPHN
  • 1.Initial Therapies-Treat metabolic
    derangements correct acidosis, hypoglycemia,
    hypocalcemia-Optimize lung recruitment
    mechanical ventilation, high-frequency
    oscillatory ventilation, surfactant-Optimize
    cardiac output and left ventricular function
    vasopressors, inotropic agents2. Pulmonary
    Vasodilators-Inhaled nitric oxide3.Future
    Therapies-Phosphodiesterase Inhibitors
    (sildenafil)-Inhaled prostacyclin analogs
    (iloprost, prostacyclin)-Recombinant superoxide
    dismutase

31
Alkalosis
  • Establish the critical pH- preferably 7.45 but
    may be higher.  If there is no dramatic
    improvement in PaO2 at a pH gt7.6, the infant can
    be deemed to be "pH unresponsive".
  • Use small boluses of bicarbonate (1-2 mmol/kg) or
    a continuous infusion (0.5mmol/kg/hour
    initially).  Liberal bicarbonate use may result
    in hypernatraemia and hypokalaemia.

32
PULMONARY VASODILATORS
  • Inhaled Nitric Oxide
  • It has a rapid and potent vasodilator effect.
  • Because it is a small gas molecule, NO can be
    delivered through a ventilator directly to
    airspaces approximating the pulmonary vascular
    bed.
  • Once in the bloodstream, NO binds avidly to
    hemoglobin, limiting its systemic vascular
    activity and increasing its selectivity for the
    pulmonary circulation.

33
Inhaled Nitric Oxide
  • Large placebo-controlled trials demonstrated that
    iNO significantly decreased the need for ECMO in
    newborns who had PPHN, although iNO did not
    reduce mortality or length of hospitalization.
  • iNO did not reduce the need for ECMO in infants
    who had unrepaired CDH.

34
  • In general, iNO should be begun when the
    oxygenation index (OI) exceeds 25, the entry
    criteria for the multicenter studies noted
    previously. The OI is a commonly used calculation
    to describe the severity of pulmonary
    hypertension and is calculated as
  • OI((mean airway pressure xFiO2)/postductal
    PaO2)x100

35
Contraindications to iNO therapy
  • congenital heart disease that is dependent on
    right-to-left shunting across the ductus
    arteriosus (eg, critical aortic stenosis,
    interrupted aortic arch, and hypoplastic left
    heart syndrome).
  • iNO may worsen pulmonary edema in infants who
    have obstructed total anomalous pulmonary venous
    return due to the fixed venous obstruction.
  • An initial echocardiographic evaluation is
    essential to rule out structural heart lesions
    and establish the presence of pulmonary
    hypertension

36
iNO
  • mainstay in the treatment of pulmonary
    hypertension in term or near term neonates
  • Approximately 30 of neonates with PPHN fail to
    respond iNO
  • In some patients, nitric oxide therapy is
    associated with rebound pulmonary hypertension
    when therapy is discontinued due to suppression
    of endogenous nitric oxide production
  • Other potential complications include the
    development of methemoglobinemia. In addition,
    iNO is a costly intervention. The potential role
    of iNO in the treatment of preterm neonates with
    respiratory insufficiency is not clear

37
Sildenafil
38
  • Sildenafil, a potent and highly specific PDE5
    inhibitor, that increase cGMP concentrations and
    result in pulmonary vasodilation
  • -Sildenafil may attenuate rebound pulmonary
    hypertension after withdrawal of iNO in newborn
    and pediatric patients.
  • -Use of sildenafil in PPHN has been limited by
    its availability only as an enteric form
  • -An intravenous preparation recently was
    investigated in newborns who had pulmonary
    hypertension.

39
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40
Effect on SpO2
41
Effect on BP
42
Dose
  • Initial 1mg/kg/dose 6 hourly
  • Can be increased to 2 mg/kg/dose 6 hourly

43
  • Milrinone- inhibit PDE3, the phosphodiesterase
    that metabolizes cAMP, and result in an increase
    of cMAP ,which also stimulates vasodilatation.

44
PGI 2
  • PGI2 stimulates membrane-bound adenylate cyclase,
    increases cAMP, and inhibits pulmonary artery
    smooth muscle cell proliferation in vitro
  • -Although the use of systemic infusions of PGI2
    may be limited by systemic hypotension, inhaled
    PGI2 has been shown to have vasodilator effects
    limited to the pulmonary circulation.

45
  • New studies indicate that scavengers of ROS such
    as superoxide dismutase (SOD) may augment
    responsiveness to iNO.
  • -Because iNO usually is delivered with high
    concentrations of oxygen, there is the potential
    for enhanced production of free radicals such as
    superoxide and peroxynitrite.

46
  • SOD scavenges and converts superoxide radical to
    hydrogen peroxide, which subsequently is
    converted to water by the enzyme catalase.
  • -Scavenging superoxide may make both endogenous
    and inhaled NO more available to stimulate
    vasodilatation and may reduce oxidative stress
    and limit lung injury

47
THANK YOU
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