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172023 tn?1334672284

Pulmonary artery hypertension

I've been having a high resting heart rate (110-120)for the past 2 months, and have been very short of breath while walking up just a flight or two of stairs.  No dyspnea at night at all.  

Yesterday I had a stress echo and it showed elevated pressures in my pulmonary arteries.  I didn't hear the exact measurements, but the cardiologist seemed concerned.

He stated that he saw no cardiac cause for this, and is suggesting that it is all due to my very mild asthma.  Even though my peak flows are normal and I'm not overtly wheezing.  I rarely ever even need to use a Proventil inhaler...maybe once a year or so.

He wants to aggressively start treating my asthma and see how things go for a month.  I'm also on an event monitor for a month, due to my tachycardia (to the 180's)and SOB on mild exertion.

What would the next steps or tests be, presuming that my condition does not improve?  Does this "asthma theory" seem reasonable at all, in light of my lack of symptoms from it?
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Avatar universal
I don't think that it is likely that mild asthma is causing shortness of breath and pulmonary hypertension. I don't know what age demographic or gender you belong to but you may be suffering from primary pulmonary hypertension, or a secondary cause of pulmonary hypertension, such as blood clots to the lungs, severe obstructive lung disease, restrictive lung disease, connective tissue disease such as lupus, scleroderma or dermatomyositis. These are in addition to any cardiac causes of pulmonary hypertension (called shunts such as patent foramen ovale, ventricular septal defect), which were presumably not seen on your echocardiogram. These comprise a short list of causes of pulmonary hypertension and shortness of breath. Cardiac causes of pulmonary hypertension are far less common than pulmonary causes, but once again I would have to take your demographic into account to estimate what are the likelihoods. You probably should see a pulmonary hypertension specialist primarily because of your symptoms and persistent tachycardia.
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Avatar universal
How high were the pressures?  Remember, an echo is just an estimation, and a right heart cath is the only way to tell for certain that someone has PH.  An echo can be way off.  I would seek out a pulmonary guy who specializes in PH, and sometimes they can be hard to find.  Not all cardiologists know how to deal with it, or even know that they don't know!  It can be misdiagnosed as asthma.  Hope this helps.
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172023 tn?1334672284
I don't know how high they were--he seemed incredulous and made the tech do it again and again...and then just shrugged, told me they "were high", and suggested it was all due to asthma (which I don't have any symptoms of, and peak flows are fine)

It certainly explains a lot of my symptoms of tachycardia, dsypnea, and chest pain on exertion.  
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