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Heart Failure Claire B. Hunter, MD
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Heart Failure is the inability of the heart to pump sufficient blood to the body tissue to meet ordinary metabolic demands.
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Heart Failure 400,000 new cases annually 5 million Americans have congestive heart failure 200,000 deaths annually Leading hospital dismissal diagnosis after age 65 Cost over 20 billion dollars annually
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Heart Failure Incidence 10/1000 over age 65 Heart failure most common discharge group diagnosis Direct and indirect costs $27.9 billion dollars in 2005 $2.9 billion annually for drugs for treatment of heart failure
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Readmission after Hospitalization for HF Among Medicare Beneficiaries 17,448 survivors of hospitalization for CHF 7,596 re-hospitalized at least once in 6 months (44%) 2,855 re-hospitalized at least twice in 6 months *16%) Risk Factors: Age >75, Male, Admission in previous 6 months, Co-morbidities, LOS >7 days Krumholtz et al. Arch of Internal Med 1997;157:99-104
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Factors Leading to the Increased Incidence of Heart Failure Successful therapies for other cardiovascular diseases –Lytics: Decreased deaths due to Myocardial Infarction –Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators: Decreased deaths due to arrhythmias –Statins: Decreased deaths due to Coronary Artery Disease Advancing age of the population
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6-year Mortality (Framingham) 82% in men (29% sudden death) 67% in women (13% sudden death)
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Some Factors Influencing the Progression of Heart Failure History of Hypertension Development of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Ischemia / Myocardial Infarction Neurohormonal Activation
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CHF: Prognosis Etiology LV function Therapy
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Heart Failure Hypertension Coronary artery disease
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Table 1 continued
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CHF: Etiologic Classification Direct myocardial damage Pressure/volume overload LV filling restriction
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CHF due to direct myocardial damage Ischemic cardiomyopathy: Extensive or multiple Mis with or without ventricular aneurysms Nonischemic cardiomyopathy: The result of myocardial toxins (alcohol or adriamyacin)
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CHF due to pressure or volume overload Pressure overload –Aortic stenosis –Hypertension –Coarctation of the aorta Volume overload –Mitral regurgitation –Aortic regurgitation –Patent ductus arteriosus –Ventricular septal defect
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Conditions restricting ventricular filling Mitral stenosis Atrial myxoma (obstructing mitral or tricuspid orifice) Pericardial restriction or constriction Restrictive or infiltrative cardiomyopathy –Sarcoidosis –Amyloidosis –Hemochromatosis Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
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Diastolic Heart Failure Resistance to filling one or both ventricles Increased ventricular filling pressures Congestive symptoms Normal systolic function
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Diastolic Dysfunction 40-50% of Heart Failure over age 70 Most common cause –LV hypertrophy –Hypertensive heart disease
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Compensatory Factors in Congestive Heart Failure Acute –Increased stroke volume due to passive cardiac muscle stretch (Frank-Starling mechanism) –Increased heart rate (cardiac output = stroke volume x heart rate) –Increased contractility (sympathetic tone and circulating catecholamines) Chronic –Hypertrophy
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Symptoms of CHF related to deficiencies of cardiac performance CHF = Cardiac output + Ventricular filling pressure Hypoperfusion RA pressure LA pressure Fatigue Dependant Breathlessness edema
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Major criteria for cardiac failure Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea Neck vein distention Rales Cardiomegaly Acute pulmonary edema S 3 gallop Increased venous pressure (>6 cm H 2 O Hepatojugular reflux Weight loss > 4.5 kg over 5 days in response to treatment
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Minor criteria for cardiac failure Ankle edema Night cough Dyspnea on exertion Hepatomegaly Pleural effusion Vital capacity reduced 1/3 from maximum Tachycardia > 120 bpm Weight loss > 4.5 kg over 5 days in response to treatment
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Balancing Act Norepinephrine Angiotensin II Aldosterone Endothelin Vasopressin Atrial + B type naturatic peptides Nitric oxide Prostacyclin Bradykenin Vasoconstrictors Vasodilators
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Evaluations Tools Echocardiogram To evaluate LV diastolic abnormalities LV systolic function Valvular abnormalities
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Evaluation cont’l Ischemia evaluation Dobutamine or Nuclear “Stress” not when wet
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Evaluation cont’d Coronary arteriography Endomyocardial Biopsy
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Aerobic capacity “6 minutes” walk MvO 2 uptake analysis
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BNP as a Therapeutic
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Actions of BNP Hemodynamic balanced vasodilation coronary arteries Neurohormonal decreases aldosterone decreases endothelin Renal increases diuresis increases natriuresis
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Disease Management Telemonitoring Weekly educational mailings Medical claims declined by $1100 per patient in treatment group Claims increased $9600 in non-treatment group
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