Brain natriuretic peptide and right heart dysfunction after heart transplantation.

Clin Transplant

Department of Physiology and Functional Explorations, Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France.

Published: June 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Heart transplantation can restore many cardiac functions, but patients often still show elevated brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) levels, even without heart or rejection issues.
  • Right ventricle dysfunction is common after heart transplants due to various factors and can lead to serious complications, making monitoring RV function essential for patient outcomes.
  • The relationship between BNP levels and RV impairment is not well understood, suggesting that other conditions may influence BNP, and tracking changes in BNP over time may be more useful than looking at single values.

Article Abstract

Heart transplantation (HT) should normalize cardiac endocrine function, but brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) levels remain elevated after HT, even in the absence of left ventricular hemodynamic disturbance or allograft rejection. Right ventricle (RV) abnormalities are common in HT recipients (HTx), as a result of engraftment process, tricuspid insufficiency, and/or repeated inflammation due to iterative endomyocardial biopsies. RV function follow-up is vital for patient management as RV dysfunction is a recognized cause of in-hospital death and is responsible for a worse prognosis. Interestingly, few and controversial data are available concerning the relationship between plasma BNP levels and RV functional impairment in HTx. This suggests that infra-clinical modifications, such as subtle immune system disorders or hypoxic conditions, might influence BNP expression. Nevertheless, due to other altered circulating molecular forms of BNP, a lack of specificity of BNP assays is described in heart failure patients. This phenomenon could exist in HT population and could explain elevated BNP plasmatic levels despite a normal RV function. In clinical practice, intra-individual change in BNP over time, rather than absolute BNP values, might be more helpful in detecting right cardiac dysfunction in HTx.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ctr.12969DOI Listing

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