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Congestive Heart Failure

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(N Engl J Med 2002; 327; 161) BNP levels correlate with the severity of HF BNP levels predict survival New York Heart Association classification of heart failure. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Congestive Heart Failure


1
Congestive Heart Failure
  • Larissa Bornikova, MD
  • July, 2006

2
Objectives
  • To review the basic pathophysiological mechanisms
    of congestive heart failure
  • To review a diagnostic approach to the patient
    with suspected HF and initial work up of newly
    diagnosed HF.
  • To summarize characteristics of diastolic heart
    failure
  • To outline management strategies for CHF

3
Definition
  • Heart failure is a clinical syndrome not a
    disease.
  • Clinically defined as the inability of the heart
    at the normal filling pressures to maintain an
    output adequate to meet the metabolic demands of
    the body.

4
Epidemiology
  • 5 million Americans have heart failure
  • 500,000 new cases of symptomatic heart failure
    annually
  • 20 of hospital admissions among persons older
    than 65
  • 45 annual mortality in severe symptomatic heart
    failure
  • More Medicare dollars are spent for diagnosis and
    treatment of heart failure than for any other
    single diagnosis.

5
The most common causes of CHF
  • Remember that CHF is a syndrome, so always look
    for an underlying cause!
  • Ischemic heart disease 40 percent
  • Dilated cardiomyopathy 30 percent
  • Primary valvular heart disease 15 percent
  • Hypertensive heart disease 10 percent
  • Other 5 percent

6
Etiology
  • WHO Classification of Heart Failure Etiologies
  • Dilated Cardiomyopathy (about 20-25 of cases are
    familial)
  • Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (e.g. IHSS, HOCM)
  • Restrictive Cardiomyopathy (infiltrating
    diseases)
  • Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy
  • Unclassifiable Cardiomyopathies (fibroelastosis,
    mitochondrial)
  • Specific Cardiomyopathies (ischemic,
    hypertensive, valvular obstruction/insufficiency,
    myocarditis, endocarditis, Chagas disease, HIV,
    adenovirus, CMV, Enterovirus).
  • Metabolic (thyrotoxicosis, hypothyroidism,
    pheochromocytoma, hemochromatosis, glycogen
    storage diseases, diabetes, kwarshiokor,
    beriberi, starvation, amyloidosis, Familial
    Mediterrenian Fever, etc.)
  • General system disease (alcohol, anthracyclines,
    radiation, SLE, PAN, scleroderma,
    dermatomyositis, sarcoidosis, muscular
    dystrophies, neuromuscular disorders, peripartum
    cardiomyopathy, etc.)

7
Pathophysiological mechanisms of CHF
  • Multiple compensatory responses over the
    long-term become deleterious.

8
Pathophysiological mechanisms of CHF
  • CARDIAC ABNORMALITIES
  • Frank-Starling Mechanism
  • Compensatory hypertrophy
  • Ventricular remodeling
  • Coronary arteries
  • Mitral regurgitation
  • Arrhythmias
  • OTHER MECHANISMS
  • Redistribution of cardiac output
  • NEUROHORMONAL
  • Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
  • Sympathetic nervous system
  • Natriuretic peptides
  • Vasodilator peptides
  • Cytokines
  • Matrix Metalloproteinases

9
Ventricular Remodeling after Infarction (Panel A)
and in Diastolic and Systolic Heart Failure
(Panel B)
Jessup M and Brozena S. N Engl J Med
20033482007-2018
10
Evaluation of the patient with suspected CHF
  • Establish diagnosis
  • Determine the etiology
  • Assess acuity and severity

11
Clinical Manifestations of CHF
  • SYMPTOMS
  • Fluid overload
  • Dyspnea
  • Orthopnea
  • Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea
  • Cardiac asthma
  • Cheyne-Stokes Respiration (aka cyclic
    respiration)
  • Fatigue, weakness
  • Exercise intolerance
  • Decreased urine output
  • Confusion
  • Lethargy
  • Nocturia
  • Anorexia
  • PHYSICAL SIGNS
  • Rales
  • Tachycardia
  • Displaced PMI
  • S3 (ventricular gallop)
  • S4 (atrial gallop)
  • Pulmonary HTN (loud P2)
  • Neck vein distention
  • Hepatic enlargement
  • Peripheral edema
  • Ascites
  • Pleural effusion
  • Cardiac Cachexia
  • Jaundice
  • Skin cold and clammy
  • Pulsus alternans

12
Fun facts
  • sensitivity specificity
  • Dyspnea on exertion 100 17
  • Orthopnea 22 74
  • PND 39 80
  • Peripheral edema 49 47
  • Based on study of 259 patients referred for
    echocardiography

13
Diagnosis of HF
  • CHF should be suspected on the basis of clinical
    presentation and radiographic findings.
  • Its a clinical diagnosis. There is no diagnostic
    test!
  • Depressed ventricular EF should be confirmed with
    echocardiography, radionucleotide
    ventriculography, or cardiac catheterization with
    left ventriculography.

14
Diastolic Heart Failure
  • Diagnosis is based on the finding of typical
    symptoms and signs of heart failure in a patient
    who has a normal LVEF and no valvular
    abnormalities on echocardiography.
  • Diagnostic findings on echocardiogram
  • - normal EF
  • - no evidence of acute MR, AR, or constrictive
    pericarditis
  • - abnormal relaxation pattern as evidenced by
    abnormal E/A ratio in mild diastolic
    dysfunction, or by Doppler assessment of flow
    into the LA, or by tissue Doppler imaging.
  • Insufficient data from randomized trials to
    assess the effects of various treatment
    modalities.

15
Patterns of Left Ventricular Diastolic Filling as
Shown by Standard Doppler Echocardiography
Aurigemma G and Gaasch W. N Engl J Med
20043511097-1105
16
Evaluation of the patient with suspected CHF
Mechanisms to consider
  • Systolic vs. diastolic
  • Low-output vs. high-output
  • Acute vs. chronic
  • Right-sided vs. left-sided
  • Backward vs. forward

17
Evaluation of the patient with CHFestablish
etiology and assess acuity/severity.ACC/AHA
guidelines (class I)
  • History/physical examination to identify
    disorders and behaviors that might cause or
    accelerate the development of progression of HF.
  • History of current and past use of alcohol,
    illicit drugs, current or past standard or
    alternative therapies, and chemotherapy drugs
    should be obtained from the patients presenting
    with HF.
  • Assessment of the patients ability to perform
    ADLs.
  • Physical examination should include assessment of
    volume status, orthostatic blood pressure
    changes, measurement of weight and height, and
    BMI..
  • Remember that CHF is a syndrome, so look for the
    underlying cause.

18
Initial evaluation of the patient with
CHFEtiological approach.ACC/AHA guidelines
(class I)
  • CBC
  • Serum electrolytes, BUN and creatinine
  • LFTs
  • Fasting blood glucose
  • Lipid profile
  • TSH
  • Urinalysis
  • CXR (cardiomegaly, Kerley B-lines, pleural
    effusions, pulmonary edema)
  • EKG (assess for evidence of ischemia, LVH, a fib)
  • Echocardiogram with Doppler (LV and RV
    function/mass/wall thickness, LVEDV, LA size, E/A
    ratio, valvular disease)
  • Coronary angiography if applicable
  • Based on clinical scenario/suspicion, may
    also consider plasma BNP, iron studies, ANA,
    serologies for SLE, evaluation for
    pheochromocytoma, viral serologies and antimyosin
    Ab, thiamine, carnitine, selenium, genetic
    testing (not class I).

19
Evaluation of the patient with suspected CHF
Role of BNP
  • Low BNP level has a good negative predictive
    value to exclude CHF as a primary diagnosis in
    dyspneic patients who present to the Emergency
    Department. (N Engl J Med 2002 327 161)
  • BNP levels correlate with the severity of HF
  • BNP levels predict survival

20
New York Heart Association classification of
heart failure.
  • Focuses on symptoms
  • Class I No limitation of physical activity.
  • Class II Slight limitation with ordinary
    exertion.
  • Class III Marked limitation with less than
    ordinary exertion.
  • Class IV Symptoms are present at rest.
  • ACC/AHA Classification
  • Emphasizes evolution and progression of heart
    failure.
  • Class A At risk for CHF, but heart is
    structurally normal.
  • Class B Structural abnormality of the heart,
    never had symptoms
  • Class C Structural abnormality current or
    previous symptoms.
  • Class D End-stage symptoms refractory to
    standard treatment.

21
Management of Heart Failure
  1. General measures
  2. Correct underlying cause
  3. Remove precipitating cause
  4. Prevention of deterioration of cardiac function
  5. Control of congestive HF state

Jessup M and Brozena S. N Engl J Med
20033482007-2018
22
Nonpharmacologic therapy
  • Exercise training for stable HF patients
    increased exercise capacity, decreased
    hospitalization rate, increased quality of life,
    decreased symptoms.
  • Weight loss in obese patients
  • Dietary Na restriction ( 2 g/day)
  • Fluid and free water restriction ( 1.5 L/day)
    especially if hyponatremic
  • Minimize medications known to have deleterious
    effects on heart failure (negative inotrops,
    NSAIDs, over-the-counter stimulants)
  • Oxygen
  • Fluid removal (dialysis, thoracentesis,
    paracentesis)

23
Stages of Heart Failure and Treatment Options for
Systolic Heart Failure
Jessup M and Brozena S. N Engl J Med
20033482007-2018
24
Pharmacologic therapy
  • ? - - - - - diuretics - - - -?
  • / digoxin - - - - - -?
  • / spironolactone
  • / beta-blockers / ?
  • ACE I ? ARB ? Hydralazine/nitrates
  • NYHA Class I II III IV
  • no change in mortality

25
Drugs to avoid in HF patients
  • NSAIDs. Induce systemic vasoconstriction,
    counteract ACE inhibitors, blunt effects of
    diuretics.
  • Thiazolidinediones. Contribute to fluid
    retention. Should be avoided in severe (class
    III-IV) failure.
  • Metformin. Increased (but small) risk of lactic
    acidosis.
  • Cilostazole. (PDE inhibitor). Increases
    mortality.
  • Calcium channel blockers (avoid Verapamil and
    Diltiazem). Trials with amlodipine and felodipine
    showed a neutral effect on mortality. V-HeFT
    trial. Circulation 1997 96 856.

26
Treatment of HF exacerbation Parenteral agents
  • IV Vasodilators
  • - Nitroglycerine
  • - Nitroprusside
  • - Recombinant BNP (nesiritide)
  • IV Inotropic agents
  • - Dopamine
  • - Dobutamine
  • - PDE inhibitors (amrinone, milrinone)
  • IV Diuretics
  • - Furosemide
  • - Bumetanide

27
Other management considerations
  • Anticoagulation. No RCT. Warfarin therapy may be
    considered in the absence of contraindications
    for patients who are in sinus rhythm and have EF
    lt30.
  • Ventricular resynchronization therapy. Survival
    benefit in patients with NYHA class III-IV HF
    despite optimal medical therapy, who are in sinus
    rhythm, have EF 35, and a prolonged QRS ( 120
    msec). CARE-HF and COMPANION trial.
  • ICD. Based on the SCD- HeFT trial. Significant
    benefit in NYHA class II - III HF and EF 35.
    Class IV patients have not been studied.
  • Mechanical circulatory support.
  • Cardiac transplantation.

28
References
  • Jessup M, Brozena S. Heart Failure. N Engl J Med
    2003 348 2007 18.
  • Aurigemma GP, Gaasch WH. Diastolic Heart Failure.
    N Engl J Med 2004 351 1097 105.
  • Hunt SA, et al. ACC/AHA 2005 Guideline Update for
    the Diagnosis and Management of Chronic Heart
    Failure in the Adult. Circulation 2005 112.
  • Harrisons Principles of Internal Medicine, 16th
    edition
  • UpToDate
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