Characterization of CMR-derived haemodynamic data in children with pulmonary arterial hypertension
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
Paediatric pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is manifested as increased arterial pressure and vascular resistive changes followed by progressive arterial stiffening. The aim of this study was to characterize regional flow haemodynamic patterns and markers of vascular stiffness in the proximal pulmonary arteries of paediatric PAH patients, and to explore the association with right ventricular (RV) function.
Forty paediatric PAH patients and 26 age- and size-matched controls underwent cardiac magnetic resonance studies in order to compute time-resolved wall shear stress metrics, oscillatory shear index (OSI), and vascular strain as measured by relative area change (RAC), and RV volumetric and functional parameters. Phase-contrast imaging planes were positioned perpendicular to the mid-main and right pulmonary arteries (MPA and RPA, respectively). Compared with controls, the PAH group had decreased systolic wall shear stress (dyne cm−2) and RAC (%) in both MPA (WSSsys: 6.5 vs. 4.3,
Wall shear stress, the principal haemodynamic force driving endothelial functional changes, is severely decreased in paediatric PAH patients and correlates with increased stiffness in the proximal pulmonary vasculature and reduced RV function.
Contributors

D. Dunbar Ivy
Author

Alex J. Barker
Author

Vitaly Kheyfets
Author

Robin Shandas
Author

Steven H. Abman
Author

Kendall S. Hunter
Author

Uyen Truong
Author

