TY - JOUR
T1 - The pressure wire as a diagnostic tool in patients with congenital cardiac disease
AU - Hamid, Tahir
AU - Hadi, Haider
AU - Clarke, Bernard
AU - Mahadevan, Vaikom
PY - 2011/6
Y1 - 2011/6
N2 - The pressure wire has emerged as a useful tool to assess the clinical severity of moderate coronary artery lesions. We report a novel use of the pressure wire in adult patients with complex congenital cardiac disease in whom it was used in assessing pressures beyond the stenosis in the distal pulmonary artery, aorto-pulmonary collaterals, and across prosthetic tricuspid valves, where conventional catheters were unable to reach. We used this in three of our patients for assessment of pulmonary artery pressures and in two patients for assessment of pressures across a prosthetic St Jude® valve. Out of the three patients referred for assessment, only two had significantly raised distal pulmonary pressures enabling them to receive appropriate therapy. Out of the two patients with a prosthetic tricuspid valve, only one required surgery based on this assessment. We describe a novel use of the pressure wire in the functional assessment of adults with congenital cardiac disease in whom conventional catheter techniques may not be able to provide adequate data. It can be a guide to provide appropriate therapy and avoid unnecessary interventions in this patient group. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011.
AB - The pressure wire has emerged as a useful tool to assess the clinical severity of moderate coronary artery lesions. We report a novel use of the pressure wire in adult patients with complex congenital cardiac disease in whom it was used in assessing pressures beyond the stenosis in the distal pulmonary artery, aorto-pulmonary collaterals, and across prosthetic tricuspid valves, where conventional catheters were unable to reach. We used this in three of our patients for assessment of pulmonary artery pressures and in two patients for assessment of pressures across a prosthetic St Jude® valve. Out of the three patients referred for assessment, only two had significantly raised distal pulmonary pressures enabling them to receive appropriate therapy. Out of the two patients with a prosthetic tricuspid valve, only one required surgery based on this assessment. We describe a novel use of the pressure wire in the functional assessment of adults with congenital cardiac disease in whom conventional catheter techniques may not be able to provide adequate data. It can be a guide to provide appropriate therapy and avoid unnecessary interventions in this patient group. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011.
KW - congenital cardiac disease
KW - Pressure wire
KW - pulmonary artery hypertension
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/79956002798
U2 - 10.1017/S1047951110002027
DO - 10.1017/S1047951110002027
M3 - Article
C2 - 21303577
SN - 1047-9511
VL - 21
SP - 317
EP - 320
JO - Cardiology in the Young
JF - Cardiology in the Young
IS - 3
ER -