MOST IMPORTANT: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a severe, potentially life-threatening complication of connective tissue diseases, among which scleroderma is first line. The aim of this paper was to review the literature and report our experience with this particular complication of connective tissue diseases. In our centre of pulmonary vascular diseases, connective tissue diseases represent the third cause of PH.
Results: Scleroderma and particularly its limited cutaneous variant, the CREST syndrome, is the most common connective tissue disease affected by pulmonary hypertension. It can be related to a specific lung parenchymal involvement (hypoxic PH), to an isolated pulmonary vascular involvement or to a cardiac dysfunction secondary to specific myocardial lesions.
Diagnosis: Echocardiography is an excellent examination to detect pulmonary hypertension. However, right heart catheterisation is necessary to confirm the diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension and to test vasoreactivity with a potent vasodilator such as nitric oxide (NO).
Regarding treatments: Oral calcium channel blockers are indicated in patients who are responders to acute NO tests. Treatment with continuous intravenous prostacylin is obviously an improvement, at least functionally, although it appears less effective than in primary PH. With the new subcutaneous, oral and inhaled vasodilatators (prostaglandin and endothelin receptor antagonists), a few cases of improvement of PH with intensive immunosuppressive therapy were observed, essentially during systemic lupus erythematosus and Sharp syndrome.
In practice: PH is a severe complication of connective tissue diseases. Early detection of this complication should allow an earlier and more aggressive therapeutic approach in these patients, before irreversible vascular lesions occur.