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Review Article | Volume 9 Issue 1 (, 2003) | Pages 82 - 87
Influence of valve replacement on plasma endothelin-1 level in mitral stenosis
 ,
 ,
1
II Clinic of Valvular Heart Disease, National Institute of Cardiology, Warsaw, Poland.
Under a Creative Commons license
PMID : -10678379
Published
Jan. 11, 2000
Abstract

Background and aim of the study: The rise of pressure in the pulmonary circulation during the course of mitral stenosis leads to pathomorphological changes and a reduction in vascular compliance. Endothelial dysfunction is also promoted, with increased expression of endothelin. This aim of this study was to evaluate whether the increase in endothelin-1 levels in pulmonary hypertension due to advanced mitral stenosis is reversible after valve replacement.

Methods: Thirty-nine patients with isolated, longlasting post-rheumatic mitral stenosis were enrolled. During preoperative Swan-Ganz catheterization blood samples were withdrawn from the pulmonary artery and capillaries for measurement of endothelin-1 (ET-1). Similar examinations were performed six months after mitral valve replacement. Hemodynamic parameters were measured also during 25-W exercise effort.

Results: The mean preoperative hemodynamic parameters of the pulmonary circulation were moderately increased. Mean plasma levels of ET-1 were about three-fold higher than normal. Capillary levels of ET-1 were significantly higher than those in the pulmonary artery (1.78+/-1.22 versus 1.03+/-1.16 pg/ml, p <0.05). There was no significant correlation between ET-1 level and any hemodynamic or clinical parameters, except NYHA functional class. After surgery, pulmonary capillary levels of ET-1 fell significantly, but were still high (1.78+/-1.22 versus 1.41+/-1.00 pg/ml); ET-1 levels in the pulmonary artery were unchanged. Patients with persistently high ET-1 levels had significantly worse exercise hemodynamic parameters, especially of pulmonary arterial compliance.

Conclusion: In patients with long-lasting, severe mitral stenosis, ET-1 levels remained increased and the ET-1 concentration gradient across the pulmonary circulation persisted for six months after valve replacement. High ET-1 capillary levels are correlated with poor exercise tolerance and poor exercise compliance of the pulmonary vessels.

 

 

 

How to cite: Snopek, G., Pogorzelska, H., & Korewicki, J. (2000). Influence of valve replacement on plasma endothelin-1 level in mitral stenosis. The Journal of heart valve disease9(1), 82–87.

 
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