The FlightBridgeED Podcast

This episode focuses on the critically ill patient with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and explains why this subgroup is especially dangerous in emergency and transport medicine. Dr. Mike Lauria distinguishes PAH from the broader label of “pulmonary hypertension,” emphasizing that elevated pulmonary pressures can come from several very different disease processes, but group 1 PAH is a rare intrinsic disease of the pulmonary arteries that creates fixed resistance to blood flow. Over time, this chronic increase in pulmonary vascular resistance places an enormous burden on the right ventricle, which may initially compensate but can eventually dilate and fail, especially when stressed by infection, hypoxia, medication interruption, or other acute illness. 

A major theme of the episode is that right ventricular failure is the central problem when these patients decompensate. Dr. Lauria reviews how rising RV afterload leads to RV dilation, reduced RV output, impaired LV filling, worsening cardiac output, and eventual shock. He also highlights an important practical pearl: many PAH patients depend on specialized outpatient therapies such as endothelin receptor antagonists, PDE-5 inhibitors, and especially continuous prostacyclin infusions like epoprostenol or treprostinil. Abrupt interruption of these medications can trigger rebound pulmonary hypertension and rapid deterioration, making continuation of home therapy a critical part of transport and ICU management. 

Management is framed around supporting the failing RV while avoiding interventions that can worsen hemodynamics. The speaker recommends maintaining MAP, usually with norepinephrine, carefully managing preload, and recognizing that this is one of the few shock states where patients may need both vasopressors and diuresis. The episode strongly warns against aggressive fluid loading, stresses the importance of correcting hypoxia and hypercapnia, and supports use of inhaled pulmonary vasodilators such as nitric oxide or epoprostenol in the right setting. It also cautions that intubation is particularly dangerous in PAH because induction and positive-pressure ventilation can sharply worsen RV function and precipitate cardiovascular collapse. 

Key points
  •  The episode distinguishes group 1 pulmonary arterial hypertension from the broader and more nonspecific category of pulmonary hypertension. 
  •  PAH is dangerous because it creates fixed pulmonary vascular resistance, which can eventually cause right ventricular failure and shock
  • Medication interruption, especially stopping continuous prostacyclin infusions, can cause rebound pulmonary hypertension and sudden collapse. 
  •  Management focuses on supporting the RV: maintain MAP, avoid unnecessary fluids, optimize oxygenation and ventilation, and consider inhaled pulmonary vasodilators. 
  • Intubation is high risk in these patients because positive pressure and induction can worsen RV afterload and trigger hemodynamic collapse. 

Creators and Guests

Host
Eric Bauer
FlightBridgeED Co-Founder | CEO | Content Creator/Host

What is The FlightBridgeED Podcast?

The FlightBridgeED Podcast provides convenient, easy-to-understand critical care medical education and current topics related to the air medical industry. Each topic builds on another and weaves together a solid foundation of emergency, critical care, and prehospital medicine.