what is it?
the clinical syndrome described as the inability of the heart to pump an adequate amount of oxygenated blood to meet the body’s demands (adequate cardiac output)
problem with filling
poor compliance or lack of space to fill
contracting problem
poor contractility
Facts
- there is no cure , only preventative measures and treatment of symptoms
Primary risk factors
- advancing age
HF 101
The goal is to improve cardiac output
Cardiac output
the amount of blood ejected out of the ventricles each minute
co=sv x hr
Cardiac index
is cardiac output adjusted for body size
ci= co/bsa bsa= height x weight /3600
Stroke volume
the amount of blood ejected from the ventricles with each ventricular systole (contraction)
Hemodynamics
co = 4-8 liters /min CI= 2.5-4 liter/min SV= 60-130mls
3 parts of stroke volume
Preload
Afterload
- influenced by vascular resistance, blood pressure, blood viscosity, and aortic /pulmonic stenosis
contractility
Frank starling’s law (or curve)
what causes the heart to fail
Compensatory mechanisms in the heart
compensation cascade in heart failure
Heart failure affects every body system
respiratory- fluid overload (pulmonary edema)
neuro- poor cardiac output( confusion, lethargy)
integumentary- poor perfusion and edema puts patients at risk for skin breakdown(swollen, cyanotic)
gastrointestinal- liver congestion and enlargement, ascites, malnutrition
urinary- poor renal perfusion
the kidney’s role in heart failure
Types of heart failure
Systolic heart failure
-decreases in the amount of blood ejected from the ventricle
causes:
Diastolic heart failure
-when the heart cant fill effectively due to increased resistance to filling
Causes:
LEFT SIDED HEART FAILURE
- the fluid back up reaches the pulmonary bed and causes pulmonary edema