Accuracy of Doppler Echocardiography in the Hemodynamic Assessment of Pulmonary Hypertension

Johns Hopkins University · Johns Hopkins Medicine · +2 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Objectives

Evaluate the accuracy of Doppler echocardiography for estimating pulmonary artery pressure and cardiac output.

Methods

We conducted a prospective study on patients with various forms of PH who underwent comprehensive Doppler echocardiography within 1 hour of a clinically indicated right-heart catheterization to compare noninvasive hemodynamic estimates with invasively measured values. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: A total of 65 patients completed the study protocol. Using Bland-Altman analytic methods, the bias for the echocardiographic estimates of the pulmonary artery systolic pressure was -0.6 mm Hg with 95% limits of agreement ranging from +38.8 to -40.0 mm Hg. Doppler echocardiography was inaccurate (defined as being greater than +/-10 mm Hg of the invasive measurement) in 48% of cases. Overestimation and underestimation of pulmonary artery systolic pressure by Doppler echocardiography occurred with a similar frequency (16 vs. 15 instances, respectively). The magnitude of pressure underestimation was greater than overestimation (-30 +/- 16 vs. +19 +/- 11 mm Hg; P = 0.03); underestimates by Doppler also led more often to misclassification of the severity of the PH. For cardiac output measurement, the bias was -0.1 L/min with 95% limits of agreement ranging from +2.2 to -2.4 L/min.

Citation impact

1,071
total citations
FWCI
47.62
Percentile
100%
References
31
Citations per year

Authors

8

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Pulmonary artery
  • Doppler echocardiography
  • Cardiology
  • Pulmonary hypertension
  • Internal medicine
  • Hemodynamics
  • Doppler effect
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding