Background: Pulmonary hypertension (PHT) occurs in approximately 30% of adult patients with sickle-cell disease (SCD) and is a risk factor for early death. The potential role of pulmonary artery obstruction, whether due to emboli or in situ thrombosis, in the etiology of SCD-related PHT is unknown., Methods: Consecutive SCD patients were screened for PHT (defined as a tricuspid regurgitant jet flow velocity > or = 2.5 m/s) employing echocardiography and were evaluated for pulmonary artery obstruction with ventilation-perfusion (VQ) scintigraphy., Results: Fifty-three HbSS, 6 HbSbeta(0)-thalassemia, 20 HbSC, and 6 HbSbeta(+)-thalassemia patients were included. The overall prevalence of PHT was 41% in HbSS/HbSbeta(0)-thalassemia patients and 13% in HbSC/HbSbeta(+)-thalassemia patients. High-probability VQ defects (Prospective Investigation of Pulmonary Embolism Diagnosis criteria) were detected in two patients, one of whom had PHT. In HbSS/HbSbeta(0)-thalassemia patients with PHT, 19 patients (86%), 2 patients (9%), and 1 patient (5%) had low-, intermediate-, or high-probability scan results as compared to 30 patients (97%), 1 patient (3%), and 0 patients (0%) in HbSS/HbSbeta(0)-thalassemia patients without PHT (p = 0.31). In HbSC/HbSbeta(+)-thalassemia patients with PHT, 3 patients (100%), 0 patients (0%), and 0 patients (0%) had low-, intermediate-, and a high-probability scan as compared to 19 patients (90%), 1 patient (5%), and 1 patient (5%) in HbSC/HbSbeta(+)-thalassemia patients without PHT (p = 0.86). There were no statistical differences in irregular distribution of the radiopharmaceutical or nonspecific signs associated with PHT between patients with and without PHT., Conclusions: Although small pulmonary artery obstruction cannot be excluded, large to medium-sized pulmonary artery obstruction is an unlikely primary causative factor in SCD-related PHT.