We read with great attention the Ganeriwal et al.’s review on useful treatments for the right heart due to acute respiratory distress syndrome [1]. We saw that the authors did not mention milrinone. Milrinone is a phosphodiesterase inhibitor and “inodilator” that increases contractility and RV relaxation. It decreases pulmonary as well as systemic resistance but may worsen existing hypotension [2].

We also read in a study by Morelli et al.’s, a 24-h infusion of levosimendan, another inodilator, improved contractility and decreased pulmonary resistance (compared to a placebo) in 35 patients with pulmonary hypertension upon the onset of ARDS and septic shock [3]. However, this drug needs further investigation in its capacity to treat ARDS due to its risks of arrhythmias and systemic hypotension.

In another study, 10 patients with ARDS were given one 50 mg dose of sildenafil. Patients showed a significant decrease in pulmonary hypertension and the right ventricle afterload. However, patients also experienced detrimental effects, such as an increase in the intrapulmonary shunt, a decrease in PaO2 and systemic arterial pressure. Due to these adverse effects, the authors did not recommend the systematic use of sildenafil in treating ARDS [4].

Emphasis must be placed on the fact that many of these IV or PO drugs derive from essential pulmonary arterial hypertension treatments, and they all suffer from the same two problems. First, a lack of pulmonary selectivity, inducing a concomitant systemic vasodilation that can be harmful if it’s associated with hemodynamic instability. Second, these vasodilators act on all the vessels of the lung, in both ventilated and non-ventilated areas by increasing the intrapulmonary shunt and reducing PaO2 [5]. While this is not the case for inhaled NO, which acts only in the ventilated lung where it gets degraded and has no effect on systemic blood pressure, it doesn’t change mortality [5].