Right Ventricular Function Under Increased Afterload: Comparison Between Pulmonary Hypertension (PH) and Pulmonary Stenosis (PS)
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Date
2025
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Background. Pulmonary hypertension (PH) and pulmonary stenosis (PS) both increase right-
ventricular (RV) afterload but via distinct pathophysiology. Comparative data on RV
remodelling across these conditions are limited.
Methods. We performed a retrospective, observational comparison of consecutive adult
transthoracic echocardiograms from a single centre (October 2023–July 2025). A PS cohort
(n=70) was assembled first; a PH cohort (n=70) from the same period was then size-matched for
head-to-head comparisons. Routine laboratory measurements were extracted; full RIMP, RV/LV
basal ratio, and most S:D ratios were measured offline by a single investigator using prespecified
rules. Primary domains were RV function (FAC, 3D RVEF, TAPSE, S′, free-wall strain, RIMP,
S:D, TAPSE/RVSP), loading indices (RAP category, RVOT A-wave, RVOT acceleration time),
geometry (RVD1/RVD2, RV/LV ratio, RVOT-PLAX, 3D volumes), wall thickness
(absolute/classification), and valve regurgitation (TR/PR). Non-parametric tests were used;
subgroup analyses contrasted mild vs moderate–severe disease.
Results. Compared with PS, PH showed worse global systolic performance (lower FAC and 3D
RVEF), adverse timing/diastolic behaviour (higher RIMP and S:D), shorter RVOT acceleration
time, and a right-shifted RAP profile (all p≤0.05). Longitudinal indices (TAPSE, S′) were
similar; free-wall strain differences were borderline. Geometrically, PH had a larger RV/LV
basal ratio and larger RVOT-PLAX; absolute RVD1/RVD2 were similar. RV wall thickness and
thickness-classification distributions were comparable. Valve phenotype diverged: TR was more
advanced in PH, PR in PS. Differences were most pronounced in the moderate–severe strata.
Conclusions. PH is characterised by reduced global RV systolic function and adverse
timing/diastolic indices with a right-shifted RAP profile, whereas longitudinal indices are similar
and free-wall strain differences are borderline. Geometry diverges (higher RV/LV ratio and
RVOT-PLAX in PH; similar RVD1/RVD2), wall thickness is comparable, and valve phenotypes
differ (more TR in PH, more PR in PS), with contrasts most evident in moderate–severe disease
Description
Keywords
Right ventricular function, Afterload, Pulmonary hypertension, Pulmonary stenosis
