Tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) can be useful in the evaluation of right ventricular (RV) regional dysfunction due to pulmonary diseases. The aim of the study was to assess RV dysfunction in patients with severe interstitial lung diseases (ILD), using both TDI and conventional transthoracic echocardiography (TTE). The study group consisted of 40 consecutive patients with end-stage ILD referred for lung transplantation (LT). Eighteen of them, mean age 47 +/-12 yr, who fulfilled the ATS/ERS criteria for LT (mean forced vital capacity (FVC) 1.4 +/-0.8 l, mean diffusing capacity for carbon dioxide (DLCO) <50% of predicted) constituted the active group, and 22 age-matched patients (mean age 49 +/-12 yr), who did not fulfill these criteria, were placed in the waiting group for LT. We found that among the TDI parameters, the longitudinal peak systolic strain rate (SR) measured at the RV outflow tract, was significantly more negative (-1.1 +/-0.3 vs. -3.2 +/-1.2 s(-1), P=0.03) and the time to peak velocity (TpVEL) in the medial and apical septal segments were shorter (129.9 +/-47.9 vs. 159.2 +/-38.1 ms, P=0.018 and 126.8 +/-44.3 vs. 154.6 +/-40.9 ms, P=0.019) in the patients from the active than those from the waiting group. TTE showed that patients from the active group had significantly lower values of tricuspid annulus plane systolic excursion (TAPSE) (14.3 +/-3.3 vs. 20.6 +/-6.2 mm, P=0.0003) and pulmonary artery acceleration time (PVAT) (70.3 +/-23.3 vs. 96.9 +/-12.4 ms, P=0.0001)compared with those from the waiting group. No other differences were found for other parameters of RV function between the examined groups. In conclusion, severity of lung disease in patients with ILD influences RV systolic dysfunction, which is reflected in both TDI and conventional echocardiographic parameters.