What is chronic heart failure?
NICE- Complex clinical syndrome of symptoms and signs that suggest the efficacy of the heart as a pump is impaired
What is early HF
Filling start to increase so contraction increase and have the same Cardiac output
Fact about the epidemiology of HF
Population age by 2032? and affects on NHS?
5year survival curves with a first time diagnosis of HF compared to common cancers
For both men and women HF lies in the same survival rates as cancer prognosis
- breast cancer higher survival
- lung lower
Roughly 60% survival
What is LVHD and HFPEF?
Left ventricular heart dysfunction
Heart failure with a preserved ejected fraction (diastolic failure)= the % of the volume of blood ejected from the left ventricle with each heartbeat divided by the volume of blood when the left ventricle is maximally filled - is normal
5 facts about heart failure
What is it? what causes it? effects? phgarmacology?
Western countries affect
Increase coronary artery disease- smoking, drinking, diet, hypertension etc block the arteries and
Where do drugs act?
On the periphery not the heart itself
LV dysfunction verses heart failure
1. reduced cardiac output
Forward flow
LV dysfunction verses heart failure
2. Increased filling pressures
Backward flow
What happens if the pressure is increased in the venous system?
causes fluid to leak out, aggrevated by gravity ( ankle swelling when stood up)
Go to bed and redistributed in sleep
seen by pressing on leg and leaving a thumb print
Marked fluid edema= get fluid in abdominal cavity
Frank starling law
Graph of LVEDP v Cardiac output (stroke volume)
-Line to high then you have a higher cardiac output at lower LVEDP= pulmonary congestion
- Line below horizontal the
A law that states that the energy liberated with each cardiac contraction is a function of the length of the muscle fibers in the ventricular wall; as preload ↑, so does end-diastolic pressure, which ↑ force of ventricular contraction
Frank starling graph- horizontal and vertical line explanations
What should you add if in pulmonary congestion?
diuretics clinical indications and classes
Indications= HF and hypertension Classes 1. Thiazides and related drugs (distal tubule) 2. Loop diuretics (loop of henle) 3, potassium- sparing diuretics 4. aldosterone antagonists
Thiazide diuretics
Weak more in HF than hypertension - Bendroflumethiazide - hydrochlorothiazide - chlorthalidone
Loop diuretics
Could get hold of easily
pass lots of urine
- Furosemide
- Bumetanide
Potassium sparring diuretics
Not common
Aldosterone antagonists
Important as help block renal aldosterone
Main adverse effects of Diuretics
What is vasodilator therapy?
Reduce afterload (work of heart goes down and O2 demand decreases) and can store blood in venous system reducing preload
What is the effect of vasodilators on mortality in chronic congestive HF?
Haemorrhage
Bleeding out