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. Faculty Members. Justin A. Ezekowitz, MBBCh MSc FRCPCAssistant Professor, University of AlbertaDirector, Heart Function Clinic, Mazankowski Alberta Heart InstituteRobert S. McKelvie, MD PhD FRCPCProfessor of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, McMaster UniversityMedical Director, Heart Failure Program, Hamilton Health SciencesMedical Director, Cardiac Health and Rehabilitation Program, Hamilton Health Sciences
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1. Webinar #1Make the Diagnosis : Acute Heart Failure
2. Faculty Members Justin A. Ezekowitz, MBBCh MSc FRCPC
Assistant Professor, University of Alberta
Director, Heart Function Clinic, Mazankowski Alberta Heart Institute
Robert S. McKelvie, MD PhD FRCPC
Professor of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, McMaster University
Medical Director, Heart Failure Program, Hamilton Health Sciences
Medical Director, Cardiac Health and Rehabilitation Program, Hamilton Health Sciences
Jonathan G. Howlett, MD FRCPC FACC FSCAI
Clinical Professor of Medicine
University of Calgary and Foothills Medical Centre
3. Faculty Disclosures Justin A. Ezekowitz:
available online at www.vigour.ualberta.ca
Robert S. McKelvie:
Honoraria and research funding from BMS, Sanofi Aventis, Astra Zeneca
Jonathan G. Howlett:
Honoraria and research funding from Merck, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Servier, Novartis, Schering
4. Session #1: Make the Diagnosis: Acute Heart FailureDate: Wednesday January 13th 2010Time: 1200-1300 hours EST
Session #2: Treatment of AHFDate: Wednesday January 27th 2010Time: 1200-1300 hours EST
Session #3: Transition of AHF to home and Chronic HFDate: Wednesday February 10th 2010Time: 1200-1300 hours EST
Session #4: Chronic HF problem managementDate: Wednesday February 24th 2010Time: 1200-1300 hours EST
5.
Program Outline
12:00 Welcome and Introductions
12:05 Case Presentation
? The Value of the History and Physical
? Other Standard Tests
? Practical Imaging
12:50 Q&A period
13:00 Closing Remarks
6. Learning Objectives Understand the burden of HF in Canada
Learn how to diagnose HF with “basic” information
Learn about other diagnostic tests useful when heart failure is on the differential
7. What is heart failure? Chronic Heart Failure (CHF):
Heart failure is a complex syndrome in which abnormal heart function results in, or increases the subsequent risk of, clinical symptoms and signs of low cardiac output and/or pulmonary or systemic congestion.
Acute Heart Failure Syndrome (AHF):
“gradual or rapid change in heart failure signs and symptoms resulting in the need for urgent therapy”
8. Case - Presentation 70 year old male presents to your ED
Worsening SOB for 2 to 3 months
+ orthopnea but no PND
Possible weight gain
Associated leg swelling
History of hypertension, no MI/DM
Retired steel mill worker, former smoker
Medications:
“Some blue one, a white diamond one and a round one”
9. Case - Examination Vitals at triage:
HR 108 bpm; BP 146/82 mmHg, RR 22, O2sat 90%ra
Initial Exam
JVP elevated, +S3, 2/6 systolic murmur
Crackles bilateral lung fields, mild wheeze
Mild obesity, ?ascites
2+ lower extremity edema, pulses 1+=
10.
QUESTIONS #1
11. How does AHF present? However before we look too far ahead into the future, let us first deal with misconceptions of the present. A common misconception is that most AHF patients have poor systolic function and that a low output state is common. In fact, half of these patients have normal LVEF and the vast majority are normotensive or hypertensive on arrival. These folks would be best treated with diuretics and vasodilators. The classic “low output” patient that would need an inotrope/mechanical support/VADs is rare and comprise only 2% of the population.
Equally important is the observation that three-quarters of these patients have worsening chronic HF suggesting the need for aggressive use of standard HF therapies.
De novo HF: ACS is most frequent cause.
In Europe in a large prospective database, the incidence of ACS was 30% and 6.2% had positive troponin in ADHERE.However before we look too far ahead into the future, let us first deal with misconceptions of the present. A common misconception is that most AHF patients have poor systolic function and that a low output state is common. In fact, half of these patients have normal LVEF and the vast majority are normotensive or hypertensive on arrival. These folks would be best treated with diuretics and vasodilators. The classic “low output” patient that would need an inotrope/mechanical support/VADs is rare and comprise only 2% of the population.
Equally important is the observation that three-quarters of these patients have worsening chronic HF suggesting the need for aggressive use of standard HF therapies.
De novo HF: ACS is most frequent cause.
In Europe in a large prospective database, the incidence of ACS was 30% and 6.2% had positive troponin in ADHERE.
12. Clinical Presentations of Heart Failure Reference:
1. Arnold JMO et al. Canadian Cardiovascular Society consensus conference recommendations on heart failure 2006:diagnosis and management. Can J Cardiol 2006;22(1):23-45.Reference:
1. Arnold JMO et al. Canadian Cardiovascular Society consensus conference recommendations on heart failure 2006:diagnosis and management. Can J Cardiol 2006;22(1):23-45.
13. Physical exam JVP elevated
Enlarged apical impulse
S3
Murmur of mitral regurgitation
Peripheral edema
Other:
HJR
Ascites
14. Is history and exam enough?
15. Case The patient is put on a telemetry monitor in the ED, and “routine” work-up is started
ED MD orders
ECG, CXR, Labs
IV lasix x1
Calls you (as admitting MD of the day) for consult and consideration of admission
You review his ECG electronically and decide it is abnormal but nil acute
16. ECG in heart failure Rarely normal
LVH, intraventricular conduction delay and LBBB are common
PVC’s, atrial arrhythmias are common
17. Case You then review his CXR…
19.
QUESTIONS #2
20. The lab tests Renal:
Creatinine can be elevated due to AHF (improves with Rx)
Pre-renal azotemia: decreased renal perfusion
Anemia (20% of patients): worse prognosis
Hyponatremia - dilutional from increased ADH
Abnormal liver enzymes
Hepatic congestion: increased bilirubin, ALP, PT INR
Hepatic ischemia: increased transaminases
other labs: SPEP/UPEP, ferritin, TSH, HbA1c etc
21. Troponin elevation common and linked to mortality
22. Case Creatinine 152 µmol/L (eGFR = 43 mls/min)
BUN 18 mmol/L
Na 138, K 4.5, Hb 120 g/L
TroponinI 0.21 (ULN 0.15)
23.
QUESTIONS #3
24. What is B-Type Natriuretic Peptide (BNP)? Found in the cardiac ventricles
Released in response to stretch and increased volume in the ventricles
BNP levels related to:
Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure
NYHA classification
BNP is found in the cardiac ventricles and is released in direct response to stretch and increased volume in the ventricles.
The utility of BNP in staging the severity of disease has been documented through its relationship to left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and NYHA classification. This information will now be reviewed.
BNP is found in the cardiac ventricles and is released in direct response to stretch and increased volume in the ventricles.
The utility of BNP in staging the severity of disease has been documented through its relationship to left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and NYHA classification. This information will now be reviewed.
25. BNP — Storage and Secretion
26. BNP: Physiologic effects BNP has multiple beneficial effects, including decreased wall stress in the cardiac myocyte and peripheral artery vasodilation. hBNP also exhibits antifibrotic properties and increases endothelial function in the peripheral artery. BNP has multiple beneficial effects, including decreased wall stress in the cardiac myocyte and peripheral artery vasodilation. hBNP also exhibits antifibrotic properties and increases endothelial function in the peripheral artery.
27.
QUESTIONS #4
28. How uncertain are we in the ED?
29. Does BNP add to clinical assessment?
30. Sure you can order it – but is it cost-effective?
31. BNP (CCS 2007) BNP/NT-proBNP … should be measured to … confirm or rule out a diagnosis of heart failure in the acute or ambulatory care setting in patients in whom the clinical diagnosis is in doubt. (class I, level A)
32. Case Regardless of your choice, the patient had a BNP drawn:
BNP 934 pg/ml
Does that help?
By what criteria do you decide if a patient has HF other than clinical gestalt?
Boston criteria, Framingham criteria, Carlson, PRIDE score all used infrequently but can help focus differential Dx
33. AHF Dx Scoring systems
34.
QUESTIONS #5
35. Echocardiography “Confirm” diagnosis with transthoracic echocardiography
LV dimensions and ejection fraction
Systolic versus diastolic function
Valvular disease
Pulmonary hypertension
All patients, Class 1C
36. Echo images
37. I don’t need an echo, I can tell their EF by looking at them!
38. Case Good quality images
LVEF 32%
LVEDD 59 mm
LVH
RVEF 34%
Borderline RV dilation
RVSP 44 mmHg
Valves:
MR 2+ (moderate central jet)
Mild TR
Anterior and inferior hypokinesis
39.
QUESTIONS #6
40. When to Order a CMR scan for a Patient with HF
Poor acoustic windows on echocardiography
“Borderline cases” on echocardiography
Viability and perfusion assessment
Tissue characterization for cardiomyopathy etiology
Early monitoring of treatment response
Evaluation of patients with dual pathologies
41. MRI images
42. Coronary angiogram Cath done:
LVEDP 22 mmHg
LAD – 70% mid
Cx – 50%, OM 50%
RCA dominant – 50% PDA
Decision to treat the CAD
43. Heart Failure Etiology Systolic – Usually LV dilation
IHD/CAD
Alcohol
Cocaine
Diabetic
Drug-Induced (eg adriamycin)
Idiopathic
Peripartum
Myocarditis
Preterminal Valvular Disease
Congenital Heart Disease
44. Common causes of HF decompensation Medication non-compliance
Excessive salt intake
Infections
Atrial fibrillation or flutter
Ischemia/infarction
Hypertension
45. Case resolution You are comfortable with the diagnosis of AHF. You decide to admit him to the ward rather than the ICU/CCU.
What are the odds of him dying in hospital?
1%
2%
5%
10%
20%
50%
46. In-hospital and 30-day mortality models ADHERE = 5.6%
EFFECT score = 60 = 0.5%
47. Seattle HF Model (outpatient)
48. Diagnosis of HF Reference:
1. Arnold JMO et al. Canadian Cardiovascular Society consensus conference recommendations on heart failure 2006:diagnosis and management. Can J Cardiol 2006;22(1):23-45.
Reference:
1. Arnold JMO et al. Canadian Cardiovascular Society consensus conference recommendations on heart failure 2006:diagnosis and management. Can J Cardiol 2006;22(1):23-45.
49. Practical Tips in HF Diagnosis HF can be diagnosed without a history or current evidence of volume overload. Thus, the term ‘heart failure’ is generally preferred over ‘congestive heart failure’
A normal LVEF does not exclude HF as a diagnosis (e.g.: HF with preserved systolic function – PSF)
First admission is the opportunity to establish etiology Reference:
1. Arnold JMO et al. Canadian Cardiovascular Society consensus conference recommendations on heart failure 2006:diagnosis and management. Can J Cardiol 2006;22(1):23-45.
Reference:
1. Arnold JMO et al. Canadian Cardiovascular Society consensus conference recommendations on heart failure 2006:diagnosis and management. Can J Cardiol 2006;22(1):23-45.
50. Key points History and physical guides the Dx and Rx
Find the cause (e.g CAD) and the trigger (e.g. salt intake)
ECG, labs, CXR, ECHO on all suspected HF patients
BNP can be useful
Advanced imaging (especially CMR) can aid Dx
Use validated risk scores where possible
51. End of Case
52.
QUESTIONS
53. For additional references, resources and tools, please visit our website:
www.hfcc.ca