Chronic Heart Failure:epidemiology, investigation and diagnosis Flashcards
What is the definition of heart failure?
A clinical syndrome comprising of dyspnoea, fatigue or fluid retention due to cardiac dysfunction, either at rest or on exertion, with accompanying neurohormonal activation
What is the prevalence of heart failure and of asymptomatic LVSD?
Heart failure: 0.4 - 2%
Asymptomatic LVSD: 0.4 - 2%
Prevalence and incidence increase with age (mean age 74years)
Estimated 40-60 000 patients with HF/LVSD(left ventricular systolic dysfunction) in Scotland
What is the largest cost attached to heart failure
Hospital inpatient care
What can be said about re-admission rates for HF?
High! and readmission is most likely to happen early.
Length of hospital admission is longer than any other condition.
What are the signs of heart failure?
Breathlessness
Fatigue
Oedema
Reduced exercise capacity
What are the signs of heart failure?
Oedema
Tachycardia
Raised JVP
Chest crepitations or effusions
3rd Heart sound
Displaced or abnormal apex beat
Is heart failure easy to diagnose based on clinical signs alone?
Yes very difficult - diagnosis incorrect in approximately 40-50% of cases
What are the 3 key features that indicate heart failure?
Symptoms and signs of HF (rest or at exercise)
Objective evidence of cardiac dysfunction and in (doubtful cases)
Resonse to therapy
(They look like they have it, tests think they have it, and they respond to treatment)
What is objective evidence of cardiac dysfunction?
•Echocardiography, Radionuclide ventriculography (RNVG/MUGA), MRI, left ventriculography
What are the screening tests available?
12 lead ECG - left ventricular systolic dysfunction is very unlikely if there is a normal ECG but it is still possible (90-95% sensitive)
(Problems with confidence of interpretation in primary care, must be entirely normal or else loses reliability)
BNP (brain (B-type) natriuretic peptide)
Amino acid peptide can be measured easily in bood
–Elevated in heart failure, therefore low BNP effectively excludes heart failure
Potential as diagnostic/ screening test for long time
What does a high / low BNP indicate?
•Low BNP effectively rules out heart failure or LVSD, elevated BNP indicates need for an echo/cardiac assessment
What is the common rule as to what will cause heart failure?
If sufficiently severe almost any structural cardiac abnormality will cause heart failure
e.g
- LV systolic dysfunction – many causes
- Valvular heart disease
- Pericardial constriction or effusion
- LV diastolic dysfunction/heart failure with preserved systolic function/heart failure with normal ejection fraction
- Cardiac arrhythmias: tachy or brady
- Myocardial ischaemia/infarction (usually via LVSD)
- Restrictive cardiomyopathy eg amyloid, HCM
- Right ventricular failure: primary or secondary to pul hypertension
What are common causes of LV systolic dysfunction?
Ischaemic heart disease (usually MI)
•Dilated cardiomyopathy(DCM): Means LVSD not due to IHD or secondary to other lesion ie valves/VSD
e.g
–Inherited
–Toxins: eg alcohol, catecholamines (phaeochromocytoma or stress cardiomyopathy (takosubo’s cardiomyopathy)
–Viral: acute myocarditis or chronic DCM
–Other infective: HIV, chaga’s disease, Lyme’s disease…….
–Systemic disease: sarcoidosis, haemachromatosis, SLE, mitochondrial dis.
–Muscular dystrophies
–Peri-partum cardiomyopathy (post pregnancy)
–Hypertension
–Isolated non compaction
–Tachycardia related cardiomyopathy
–RV pacing induced cardiomyopathy
–End stage hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
–End stage arrhythmogenic RV cardiomyopathy
Severe aortic valve disease or mitral regurgitation
How do you figure out which type of heart failure is present? IHD, valvular disease or dilated cardiomyopathy
Take a detailed history - may provide answer
Esculde renal failure, anaemia, thyroid function tests
Serology to check for viruses and autoantibodies
Consider to exclude phaechromocytoma (cancer in the adrenal gland)
Consider other causes such as thyroid, muscular dystrophy
ECG, ECHO and sometimes a CXR
Consider coronary angiography in patients with chest pain who are over 70.
Cardiac MRI looking for infarction, inflammation and fibrosis
Why is echocardiography always an essential investigation?
Assesses:
–LV systolic dysfunction
–Valvular dysfunction
–Pericardial effusion / tamponade
–Diastolic dysfunction
–LVH
–Atrial/ventricular shunts / complex congenital heart defects (ventral septal defects)
–Pulmonary hypertension / Right heart dysfunction
•May not identify constriction / may miss shunts (but you will see atrial dilatation)