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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Right Ventricular Function in Cardiovascular Disease, Part I Anatomy, Physiology, Aging, and Functional Assessment of the Right Ventricle

Francois Haddad, +3 more
- 18 Mar 2008 - 
- Vol. 117, Iss: 11, pp 1436-1448
TLDR
The goal of the present review is to offer a clinical perspective on RV structure and function, using echocardiography and magnetic resonance imaging to create new opportunities for the study of RV anatomy and physiology.
Abstract
In 1616, Sir William Harvey was the first to describe the importance of right ventricular (RV) function in his seminal treatise, De Motu Cordis : “Thus the right ventricle may be said to be made for the sake of transmitting blood through the lungs, not for nourishing them.”1,2 For many years that followed, emphasis in cardiology was placed on left ventricular (LV) physiology, overshadowing the study of the RV. In the first half of the 20th century, the study of RV function was limited to a small group of investigators who were intrigued by the hypothesis that human circulation could function adequately without RV contractile function.3 Their studies, however, were based on an open pericardial dog model, which failed to take into account the complex nature of ventricular interaction. In the early 1950s through the 1970s, cardiac surgeons recognized the importance of right-sided function as they evaluated procedures to palliate right-heart hypoplasia. Since then, the importance of RV function has been recognized in heart failure, RV myocardial infarction, congenital heart disease and pulmonary hypertension. More recently, advances in echocardiography and magnetic resonance imaging have created new opportunities for the study of RV anatomy and physiology. The goal of the present review is to offer a clinical perspective on RV structure and function. In the first part, we discuss the anatomy, physiology, aging, and assessment of the RV. In the second part, we discuss the pathophysiology, clinical importance, and management of RV failure. ### Macroscopic Anatomy of the RV In the normal heart, the RV is the most anteriorly situated cardiac chamber and lies immediately behind the sternum. In the absence of transposition of great arteries, the RV is delimited by the annulus of the tricuspid valve and by the pulmonary valve. As suggested by Goor and Lillehi,4 the RV can be described in …

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Citations
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Echocardiographic evaluation of right ventricular systolic function: The traditional and innovative approach.

TL;DR: Many studies have shown that both free wall and 6-segment RVLS present a stronger correlation with the RVEF assessed by cardiac magnetic resonance than conventional parameters and seem to be more sensitive in detecting myocardial dysfunction at an earlier, subclinical stage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Right Ventricular Longitudinal Strain Measures Independently Predict Chronic Heart Failure Mortality.

TL;DR: The findings demonstrate the role of RV 2D strain measures to independently predict mortality in patients with chronic heart failure and highlight the clinical usefulness of this echocardiographic approach in the daily management of HF outpatients.
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Noninvasive Imaging in the Assessment of the Cardiopulmonary Vascular Unit

TL;DR: Although echocardiography is the mainstay in the assessment of hemodynamic and ventricular function in PH, MRI has emerged as the gold standard for quantifying volumes, function, and flow in the right side of the heart.
Journal ArticleDOI

3D echocardiographic evaluation of right ventricular function and strain: a prognostic study in paediatric pulmonary hypertension

TL;DR: PaediatricPH patients have impaired RV function compared with normal children, and 3D RV EF, volumes, FAC, and free wall RV strain serve as outcome predictors for paediatric PH patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamics of the tricuspid valve annulus in normal and dilated right hearts: a three-dimensional transoesophageal echocardiography study.

TL;DR: Three-dimensional transoesophageal echo allows us to examine the tricuspid valve annulus in great detail and finds that in patients with DRH, the TVA dilates in a SL direction, resulting in a more circular orifice.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

ACC/AHA 2006 Guidelines for the Management of Patients With Valvular Heart Disease

TL;DR: It is important that the medical profession play a significant role in critically evaluating the use of diagnostic procedures and therapies as they are introduced in the detection, management, and management of diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acute pulmonary embolism: clinical outcomes in the international cooperative pulmonary embolism registry (ICOPER)

TL;DR: Data from ICOPER provide rates and highlight adverse prognostic categories that will help in planning of future trials of high-risk PE patients and highlight significant prognostic factors associated with death.
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