9. Congestive Cardiac Failure Flashcards
What is systolic heart failure?
It is when there is impaired left ventricular contraction
What is diastolic heart failure?
It is when there is impaired left ventricular relaxation
What symptoms will someone with chronic heart failure present with?
- Breathlessness worsened by exertion
- Loss of Energy / Fatigue
- Cough
- Orthopnoea
- Paroxysmal Nocturnal Dyspnoea
- Peripheral oedema (swollen ankles)
What is orthopnea?
The sensation of shortness of breath when lying flat (it is relieved by sitting or standing).
What is paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea?
This is the experience of waking up at night with a severe attack of shortness of breath and cough
What clinical signs could someone with congestive heart failure have?
- Pulmonary oedema / pleural effusion
- Raised JVP
- Pitting oedema
- Ascites
- Tachycardia
- S3 Gallop
What is the difference between pulmonary oedema and pleural effusion?
Pulmonary oedema is when there is fluid WITHIN the lung (ie. in the alveoli).
Pleural effusion is when there is fluid OUTSIDE the lung and in the pleural cavity instead.
What question can you ask in a history to check for orthopnea?
How many pillows are they needing to sleep? Or if its really bad, are they having to sleep whilst sat up in their chair?
Ask if they have always needed that or progressively add more and more pillows over time?
What question can you ask in a history to check for paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea?
Have you ever woke up at night with shortness of breath?
They might have to open a window in an attempt to get air
What 3 mechanisms are there behind paroxysmal nocturnal dysopnea?
- Fluid settling across a large surface area of the lungs when lied on back
- The respiratroy centre has reduced activity whilst sleeping, so you are at more of a hypoxic state.
- There is less adrenalin in circulation whilst asleep, meaning the heart muscles are more relaxed, and there is less output
What are the main categories of causes of heart failure?
- Myocardial Disease (CAD, Hypertension, Cardiomyopathies)
- Valvular Heart Disease (AS, MR)
- Pericardial Disease
- Congenital Heart Disease
- Arrhythmias (AF)
- High Output States (anaemia, thyrotoxicosis, sepsis etc.)
- Volume overload
- Obesity
- Drugs (alcohol, cocaine, NSAIDS, beta-blockers, calcium-channel blockers)
What are some types of myocardial disease that can cause heart failure?
- CAD
- Hypertension
- Cardiomyopathies (Familial, Infective, immune-related, toxins, pregnancy, infiltrative)
What are some risk factors for congestive heart failure?
- Myocardial infarction (MI) is the most potent risk factor, increasing the risk by 15x
- Diabetes mellitus - increases risk up to 5x
- Dyslipidaemia
- Old age
- Male
- Hypertension
- Left ventricular dysfunction
- Cocaine abuse
- Alcohol abuse
- Exposure to cardiotoxic agents
- Left ventricular hypertrophy
- Renal insufficiency
- Valvular heart disease (such as aortic stenosis or mitral regurgitation)
- Uncontrolled atrial fibrillation
- Family history
What should you ask about in a history to investigate heart failure?
- Ask about typical symptoms
- Breathlessness (on exertion, at rest, orthopnea, nocturnal cough, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea)
- Fluid retention (ankle swelling, bloated feeling, abdominal swelling, weight gain)
- Fatigue, decreased exercise tolerence, or increased recovery time post exercise
- Light headedness or history of syncope - Ask about risk factors
- CAD / MI
- Hypertension
- AF
- Diabetes Melllitus
- Drugs including alcohol
- Family history of heart failure or sudden cardiac death under the age of 40
What physical examinations should you do for someone in which you suspect heart failure?
Examine for;
- Tachycardia (heart rate over 100 beats per minute) and pulse rhythm.
- A laterally displaced apex beat, heart murmurs, and third or fourth heart sounds (gallop rhythm).
- Hypertension.
- Raised jugular venous pressure.
- Enlarged liver (due to engorgement).
- Respiratory signs such as tachypnoea, basal crepitations, and pleural effusions.
- Dependent oedema (legs, sacrum), ascites.
- Obesity.
When should you arrange hospital admission for someone with heart failure?
- If they have severe symptoms
- If they are pregnant
- If they have given birth in the last 6 months
If there is uncertainty, seek specialist advice
If you suspect someone has heart failure, which diagnostic tests will you need to do?
Hint: need to do
- Measure their NT-proBNP
- Arrange a 12 lead ECG
- Echocardiography (done after first 2 have been done)
What is the timing of how urgently the echocardiography dependent on?
The levels of NT-proBNP
Aside from the main 3 tests, what other tests would you want to do in someone with suspected heart failure?
- Chest X-ray (rules out other conditions and can show pulmonary oedema)
- Urine Dipstick for blood and protein
- Lung function tests (peak flow and spirometry)
- Bloods (FBC, U&Es, eGFR, TFT, LFTs, HbA1c, Fasting Lipids, Troponins, Haematinics)
Why would you want to do fasting lipids and HbA1c tests in someone with suspected heart failure?
To rule out the possibility of them having a hypo- or hyperglycaemic event which has caused the symptoms
What are haematinics? What are they?
They are the nutrients required by the body for erythropoesis. They are;
- Vitamin B2, B3, B6, B12
- Vitamin A
- Vitamin C
- Vitamin E
- Iron
- Folic Acid
- Copper
- Cobalt
Once you have confirmed that they have heart failure, aside from treatment, what do you need to do next and why?
You need to work out the underlying cause of the heart failure.
This is because heart failure is a syndrome, and not a diagnosis.
What is BNP?
It is secreted from the ventricles in response to excessive stretching of heart muscle cells.
How useful are normal levels of BNP? How useful are high levels of BNP?
Normal levels can rule out heart failure
High levels just indicate that it could be heart failure (but it could be other things as well)
Using a patients BNP levels, what management plan will they need?
Ie. X amount of BNP requires A, B and C etc.
- If the NT-pro-BNP level is above 2000 pg/mL, refer urgently for specialist assessment and echocardiography to be seen within 2 weeks.
- If the NT-pro-BNP level is between 400–2000 pg/mL, refer for specialist assessment and echocardiography to be seen within 6 weeks.
- If NT-pro-BNP is less than 400 pg/mL, be aware that a diagnosis of heart failure is less likely. Consider discussion with a physician with subspeciality training in heart failure if a clinical suspicion of heart failure persists.
What BNP level indicates heart failure with reduced ejection fraction? What about for preserved ejection fraction?
Trick question. BNP is not able to differentiate this.