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Heart Failure. Anna Jaatinen MD Rotary Doctor Bank Finland Ilembula Hospital. Today’s Topics. Heart failure patophysiology and reasons for heart failure Clinical presentation How to treat Acute cardiac failure Chronic cardiac failure Patient education. Heart Failure -Definition.
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HeartFailure Anna Jaatinen MD Rotary Doctor Bank Finland Ilembula Hospital
Today’sTopics • Heart failure patophysiology and reasons for heart failure • Clinical presentation • How to treat • Acute cardiac failure • Chronic cardiac failure • Patient education
HeartFailure-Definition Heart failure is a clinical syndrome in which the heart impair its ability to meet the metabolic demands of the body = heart function is not enough to provide blood to the body There is always reason for heart failure! Heart failure is NOT a disease by itself!
Epidemiology and Prognosis • Prevalence • In Europe and USA • 2-3% of adult population, mean age 75 years • Leading cause of the hospitalization in people over than 65 years • In developing countries • 2-3% of population • 20-30 % in people over 70 years • Prognosis is poor if not treated • Even when treated 1-year mortality is 30%, and 5-year mortality 50%
Types of the HeartFailure • Systolic dysfuntion • Abnormal myocardial contraction • Coronary artery disease, dilated cardiomyopathy • Diastolic dysfuntion • Abnormal realaxation and filling • Hypertension, hypertrofic cardiomyopathy, infiltrative cardiomyopathies, constictive pericarditis • Systolic + diastolic dysfuntion
Types of the heartfailure • Left side cardiac failure • Right side cardiac failure • Pulmonary hypertension, pulmonar stenosis, pulmonary embolism • Acute • Chronic
DiseasesBehind the CardiacFailure • Coronary artery disease • Hypertension • Valvular heart disease • Myocarditis • Infectious, Autoimmune • Familial cardiomyopathy • Infiltrative disease • Amyloidosis, Sarcoidosis • Hemochromatosis • Hypertrofic cardiomyopathy • Constrictive pericardial disease • High-output states; arterio-venous malformation • Tacycardia-induced cardiomyopathy • Idiopathic cardiomyopathy • Toxins; alkohol, cocaine, chemotherapy > 80% < 20%
PotentialTriggers and PrecipitatingFactors • Myocardial ischemia • Hypertension • Arrythmias • Atrial fibrillation! • Infection • Volume overload • Anemia • Alkohol/toxins • Thyroid disease • Drugs • NSAID! • Pulmonary embolism • Medication noncompliance • Dietary noncompliance • Salt overload, water overload • Alcohol Heart Other
Pathophysiology • Heart failure begins with injury or stress on the heart • Remodelling • Increase in left ventricular size or/and mass (dilatation or hypertrophy) • Stress on the heart, function of the heart • Compensatory adaptation • Reduction in cardiac output results organ hypoperfusion and pulmonary and systemic venous congestion
ClinicalPresentation • Symptoms • Dyspnea • First on exertion, later also on rest • Exercise intolerance • Fatique • Ortopnea, paroxyxmal nocturnal dyspnea • Cough, wheezing • Lower extremity swelling • Presyncope, palpitation • Angina pectoris (chest pain) can be present
ClinicalPresentation • Physical examination and findings • Lower extremity edema • Pulmonary cracles • Jugular venous distension • Diminished carotic upstrokes • Pleural and pericardial effusions • Hepatic congestion • Ascites • Third or fourth heart sound may be present as well as holosystolic murmur (tricuspic or mitral regurgitation)
Clinicalpresentation • Extreme decompensation • Cardiogenic shock • Renal failure, decreased urine output • Confusion, lethargy
Clinicalpresentation • Laboratories • Reason for heart failure? • Hb (anemia?) • B/S, WBC, Urinalysis if you suspect infection • Also when possible: metabolic panel (electrolytes, creatinine, liver function tests, calcium, fasting glucose), lipid profile, urinalysis, thyroid function tests • If new oncet and clinically suspected: test for HIV, hepatitis, hemochromatosis, rheumatologic diseases • Electrocardiogram ECG • Iscemia? Arrhytmias? Conduction delays?
Clinicalpresentation • Imaging • Chest X-ray • Pulmonary edema? • Cardiomegaly? • Rule out other etiologies of dyspnea (pneumonia, pneumothorax) • Echocardiogram • LV funtion and structure? • Valvular heart disease? • Exclude cardiac tamponade
New York Heart Association FunctionalClassification of HF NYHA I No symptoms or limitation while performing ordinary physical activity NYHA II Mild symptoms and slight limitation when performing ordinary physical activity NYHA III Marked limitation in activity due to symptoms, even durin less-than –ordinary activities. Comfortable only at rest. NYHA IV Severe limitations with symptoms even while at rest.
Treatment • Goal: blocking the neurohormonal pathways that contribute to the progression of heart failure • Reducing symptoms • Reducing hospitalization • Reducing mortality • Most patients reguire multidrug regimen • Treatment shoud be maintained even the clinical status improves!
Medications • Β-blockers • Carvedilol, bisoprolol, metoprolol, (propranolol, atenolol) • Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (eg ACE-inhibitors) • Captopril, enalapril, perindopril, lisinopril…. • Vasodilators • Isosorbide mononitrate, Isosorbide dinitrate, Glyceryl trinitrate • Hydralazine • Diuretic therapy • Furosemide (loop-diuretic) • Thiazide diuretics: Hydrochlorothiazide, chlortialidone • Spironolactone (potassium-sparing diuretic, aldosterone receptor antagonist) • Digoxin (Angiotensin receptore blockers: Valsartan, Candesartan)
Specialconsiderationsaboutmedications • Spironolactone with ACE-inhibitor: Potential risk for life-threatening hyperkalemia • Renal insufficiency and NSAIDs increase the risk • Serum potasium-level should be monitored • Β-blockers are contraindicated patients with • Symptomatic bradycardia or hypotension • Bronchial Asthma
Specialconsiderationsaboutmedications • Digoxin • Increaces myocardial contractility, may attenate neurohormonal activation of HF • Dose 0.125 to 0.25 mg/day • Even lower dose: renal insufficiency, women, elderly, low body weight • Narrow therapeutic range! • Drug interactions! • Eryhromycin and tetracycline may increase digoxin levels up to 40% • Verapamil, flecainide, amiodarone also increace levels
AcuteHeartFailure and CardiogenicPulmonaryEdema • Clinical manifestation on CPE can occur rapidly • Dyspnea, anxiety, restlessness, coughing pink foam • Psysical signs: decreased peripheral perfusion, pulmonary congestion, use of accessory respiratory muscels, wheesing • Chest-X-ray: cardiomegaly, interstitial and perihilar vascular engorgement, pleural effusions • Radiographic abnormalities may follow the development of symptoms by several hours
AcuteHeartFailure and CardiogenicPulmonaryEdema Acute treatment • Supplemental oxygen (Keep oxygen saturation >90%, even >95%) • Patient in a sitting position; improves pulmonal function • Bed rest, pain control and relief of anxiety can decrease cardiac work load • Precipitating factors should be indetificated and corrected • Hypertension? Acute iscemia? Tachyarrythmias? Volume overload? Severe anemia? Infection?
AcuteHeartFailure and CardiogenicPulmonaryEdema Acute Medications • Morphine 2-5 mg i.v. (4-8 mg s.c., 5-10 mg p.o.) can be repeated 10-25 min until the effect is seen • Furesemide 20 (-80)mg i.v. may be repeated in 10-15 min • Nitroglyseride i.v. (or p.o.) if systolic blood pressure is >100 • (If rapid arrythmia and possible iscemia consider β-blocker with small dose) • Sometimes also fluid-resuscitation is needed when cardiogenic shock and decreased preload
AcuteHeartFailure and CardiogenicPulmonaryEdema Treatment after acute phase • Β-blocker, ACE-inhibitor • If patient has the medication before acute oncet pulmonary edema, treatment should not be stopped • When starting as a new medication be careful and start when the condition is stabilized • If myocardial ischemia, start as soon as possible (in 48 h) • Treat possible anemia: Blood transfusion if needed (slowly!)
AcuteHeartFailure and CardiogenicPulmonaryEdema • In the ward • Monitor BP, pulse, ventilation rate, temperature • Weight every day! • Or monitor diuresis and calculate the balance (remember also evaporation) • Weight should go down 0.5-1 kg/day • Is breathing easier? Are swellings decreasing? • Physiotherapy after the acute phase if needed • Patient education before going home
Treatment of ChronicHeartFailure • Medications wich has been shown to reduce morbidity and re-hospitalization • Β-blocker, ACE-inhibitor, Digoxin, spironolactone • Medications wich reduce symptoms • Diuretics, Vasodilators (Nitrates+hydralazine) NYHA 1-2: ACE-inhibitor, B-blocker, furosemide (+spironolactone) NYHA 3-4: Add vasodilator, spironolactone, Digoxin Consider anti-thrombotic agents And remember to take care of the cause of the HF, hypertension, diabetes…
Patient and FamilyEducation • Explain • What heart failure is and why symptoms occurs • Cause of heart failure • How to recognize symptoms and what to do when they occur • Daily self-weighting and what to do if weight gains • Drugs • Encourage to maintain the medication, give information about the dose and effect • Dietary treatment and social habit • Control sodium intake, avoid excessive fluid intake (in severe cases limit fluid intake 1-1.5 l/day) • No excessive alcohol, no smoking! • Regular exercise within limits of symptoms
Drugs to avoid in Heartfailure • NSAIDs (also Coxibs): Ibuprofein, Diclofenac • Trisyclic anti-depressants: Amitriptylin • Some anti-arrythmic drugs: Verapamil • Systemic corticosteroids • Lithium • Nature medications?
Take home message • Heart failure is a sydrome, not a isolated disease! • Cause of the heart failure should be considered! • Ask and examine: dyspnea, swellings, heart and pulm auskultation, chest-x-ray • Treatment is usually multidrug treatment and it should be mantained even the patient is improving • Patient education is crucial!