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Heart failure is a clinical syndrome resulting from structural or functional cardiac disorders. This article explores its causes, symptoms, and treatment options.
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Cardiac Failure • Clinical syndrome that can result from any structural or functional cardiac disorder that impairs the ability of the ventricle to fill or eject blood.(AHA/ACC HF guidelines 2001)
Economic burden- 1.2-2% of all healthcare costs and 60-75% of these costs relate to hospital burden • NYHA classes 1-1V • All class HF mortality- 50% in 5 years • NYHA Class 1V- 1 year survival -50%
NYHA (New York Heart Association Classification) • Class 1 Cardiac disease but no limitation in ordinary physical activity, e.g. no SOB when walking, climbing stairs etc. • Class 2 Mild symptoms ( mild SOB and or angina) and slight limitation during ordinary activity • Class 3 Marked limitation in activity due to symptoms, even during less than ordinary activity , e.g. walking short distances (20-100 m) Comfortable only at rest. • Class 4 Severe Limitations. Experiences symptoms even at rest. Mostly bedbound patients
Causes of death • 40% Sudden • 50% pump failure • 30-40% are in NYHA class 111- 1V • Rehospitalisation rates • 2% at 2 days • 20% at 1 month • 50% at 6 months
Causes • Myocardial Dysfunction (IHD, DCM) • Volume overload (AR, MR) • Obstruction (AS, MS, HOCM) • Diastolic Dysfunction (Constriction) • Mechanical Problems (LV aneurysm) • Rhythm Disturbance (AF) • High Output (anaemia, shunts, thyrotoxicosis) • IHD and HT-most common disease processes often in combination causing myocardial damage
Pathophysiology • Large MI CO BP Compensatory Mechanisms Neuroendocrine activation Renin angiotensin • Aldosterone
Pathophysiology Neuroendocrine Activation- Increased HR and contractility Aldosterone System-Na retention and hence water retention Renin angiotensin system- vasoconstriction
Pathophysiology • An increase in LVED volume • Starling’s law- increased LVED volume and hence increased stroke volume • Hence increased stress on the left ventricular wall- further thinning of the infarcted wall and expansion of infarcted region • The normal wall can compensate for the rest of infarcted area- compensatory mechanism otherwise LV dilatation and LVSD-worse than original infarct
Signs and Symptoms of Heart failure • ESC guidelines • Essential features-SOB, ankle swelling, objective evidence of cardiac dysfunction at rest using echo • Non essential features- Response to treatment directed at HF (if diagnosis in doubt)
Symptoms • Exertional Dyspnoea • Orthopnoea • PND • Ankle swelling • Anorexia and wt loss • Cold peripheries • Tiredness
Signs • Tachycardia • Hypotension • Raised JVP • 3rd heart sound • PSM of MR • Basal crackles • Ankle oedema
Investigations • ECG- If normal chances of LVSD are very low (<5%)- LBBB, Q waves, non specific ST/T waves changes • CXR- cardiomegaly, Pulmonary oedema • BNP- elevated in both systolic and diastolic dysfunction, results affected by obesity, diuretics and ACEi, blockers, spironolactone-all decerase the levels . LVH, ischaemia and tachycardia , PE , eGFR < 60, COPD, sepsis will increase the levels • Echo-confirmatory test- systolic dysfunction/any valvular disease/ischaemic aetiology or regional wall motion abnormality/diastolic dysfunction • Nuclear imaging • Stress echocardiography • Cardiac catheterisation • Lung function tests
Treatment • Acute HF • Sit up, high dose O2, i/v diamorphine, i/v GTN , intubation • Treat intercurrent infection • Systolic BP<80 –poor prognosis • Ionotropes to increase BP and help orgn perfusion
Treatment • Chronic HF • Non pharmacological- restrict salt and fluid intake, encourage exercise, decrease or abstain from alcohol • Flu vaccination • Tight BP control • Loop diuretcis-frusemide 40-80mgs or bumetanide 1-2mgs
Non Coronary Interventions • Pacing- broad QRS+ LBBB • Defibrillators-ventricular arrhythmias • Valvular surgery-Mitral valve repair • Heart Transplant- otherwise fit individuals • Left ventricular assist devices- as a bridge to transplantation
Treatment • ACEi – improve prognosis and symptoms, optimise dose, slow titration every 2 weeks with UEs monitoring • ARBs- role not confirmed (to be used if unable to tolerate ACEi) • Hydralazines and nitrates- improve diagnosis and prognosis (consensus study), first line or 2nd line (NYHA 111-1V), Africo carribean population • blockers- Improve prognosis and symptoms. Assess HR and BP at each titration , use those licensed for HF (even in pts with COPD) • Spironolactone- NYHA 111-1V, monitor K levels and eGFR • Ivabradine- in pts with NYHA class 2-4 stable CHF with systolic dysfunction, in sinus rhythm, HR ≥ 75/min and given in combination with other HF treatment or when beta blocker is contraindicated, LVEF ≤ 35% aftre stabilisation with other treatement for at least 4 weeks.
Treatment • Rehabilatation- supervised group exercises-rehab programme • Psychological and educational support-role of community heart failure nurses
CRT (cardiac resynchronisation therapy) • Moderate to severe LVSD • NYHA 111-1V • No revascularisation or surgery strategy • Stable and optimal medical regime • QRS ≥ 130ms • EF≤ 35% • LVED dimension ≥ 55mm
Case 1 • 73 years old female • Recent onset of orthopnoea • PMH-HT diagnosed 3 years ago • Medication-atenolol • o/e- b/l basal crepts • ? Suspected diagnosis • Tests needed to confirm diagnosis • Treatment
Case 2 • 71 years old male • P/C- breathlessness and fatigue , gradually worsening • PMH- Type 1 DM, angina • o/e- irregular pulse (possibly AF), low volume • ? Heart failure • Tests for confirmation
Case 3 • 68 years old female • P/C- exertional breathlessness, ankle swelling, cough • PMH- Type 2 DM • o/e- ankle oedema, high BP and 2cms hepatomegaly • ? Heart failure • Tests • Treatment
Case 4 • 80 years old female • P/C- fatigue , weight loss, feels stomach always bloated • PMH-chronic bronchitis • o/e- raised JVP, PSM in the lower sternal edge, 3rd HS, ascites • ? Heart failure • Tests
Case 5 • 62 years old male • P/C- breathlessness and orthopnoea • PMH-COPD • o/e- b/l basal crepitations and tachycardia • ? Exacerbation of COPD or possible heart failure • Tests
Case 6 • 65 years old female of Africo-Caribbean ethinicity • P/C- 3/52 of exertional breathlessness • PMH- Hypertension and obesity • o/e- b/l basal crepitations, laterally displaced apical impulse • ? Heart failure • Tests • Treatment • After 6 months pt presents again with worsening breathlessness • Treatment • Pt returns after 4 months with breathlessness at rest
Case 7 • 57 years old male smoker • P/C- 3/52 cough • PMH- LVSD • Current medication-Bisoprolol 10mgs and Ramipril 7.5mgs • o/e- chest clear , no signs of fluid overload • CXR normal, renal function normal • Review the previous diagnosis of heart failure • Repeat BNP
Case 8 • 64 years olf female • P/C- 2/7 breathlessness • PMH- HT, STEMI 8/7 treated with PCI • Medications- aspirin 75mgs, clopidogrel 75mgs, atenolol 25mgs, Ramipril 3.75mgs • o/e- b/l crepts in lower 1/3 of lungs, raised JVP, 3rd HS , normal Ues • Suspected HF secondary to MI • Treatment
Case 8 continued… • Echo- moderately severe systolic dysfunction • Aldosterone antagonist licensed for HF following MI • Eplerenone 25mgs – monitor UE and K levels • Change atenolol to Bisoprolol 1.25mgs • Titrate Bisoprolol once signs of congestion cleared