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Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease.
Quarterly Journal of Medicine 1975 January
Pulmonary veno-occlusive disease has recently been recognized as a distinct pathological entity and a cause of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Twenty previously reported cases and a new patient are here reviewed. The majority presented with breathlessness and in the early stages of the disease, when the abnormal signs were not striking, some patients were wrongly diagnosed as suffering from an anxiety state. The condition usually has an insidious onset but is remorselessly progressive and since no effective treatment is available at present, invariably fatal and the majority of patients have died within two years. The fully developed clinical picture is dominated by symptoms and signs of pulmonary arterial hypertension, similar to those found with other diseases causing a raised pulmonary arterial blood pressure. However, some patients with pulmonary veno-occlusive disease show, in addition, signs of pulmonary venous and capillary hypertension, which can lead to its clinical recognition when associated with a normal left atrial blood pressure. In this condition the pulmonary wedge pressure would appear to be unreliable as a record of the left atrial blood pressure. Pulmonary angiography and lung scanning will differentiate pulmonary veno-occlusive disease from massive thromboembolic pulmonary arterial hypertension but not from primary pulmonary arterial hypertension or micro thromboembolism. Although in some patients it should now be possible to recognise pulmonary veno-occlusive disease in life, there will be others where, even after full investigation, it will still be impossible to differentiate the condition from primary pulmonary arterial hypertension or micro thromboembolism and in these the diagnosis will only be made when the distinctive histological pattern of the disease is demonstrated. In pulmonary veno-occlusive disease there is a widespread occlusion of the pulmonary veins and venules by a loose intimal fibrosis which is often basophilic. Recanalization of the occluded veins is common and in some cases may be very striking. These occlusive lesions in the pulmonary veins lead to an elevation of pulmonary arterial pressure with associated disease of these vessels, and are also responsible for chronic oedema of the elveolar walls with subsequent development of interstitial pulmonary fibrosis. In the present case organised thrombi were present in the pulmonary arteries in addition to the pulmonary venous lesions.
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