CVS: Heart Failure Flashcards
Outline the pathophysiology of Heart Failure
CO is inadequate for the body’s requirements
Systolic failure = inability of the ventricle to contract normally – reduced CO
Diastolic failure = failure of ventricles to relax and fill normally
CHF = L and R sided HF
Outline the Aetiology of Heart Failure
Systolic failure = IHD, MI, cardiomyopathy
Diastolic failure = constrictive pericarditis, tamponade, restrictive cardiomyopathy, HTN
What are the signs and symptoms of Heart Failure
LVF = dyspnoea, poor exercise tolerance, fatigue, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea (PND), nocturnal cough (pink frothy sputum), wheeze, nocturia, cold peripheries, weight loss, muscle wasting
RVF = peripheral oedema, ascites, nausea, anorexia, facial engorgement, pulsation in neck/face (tricuspid regurgitation), epistaxis
Cyanosis
Decreased BP
Narrow pulse pressure
Displaced apex
Murmurs of mitral or aortic valve disease
How would you investigate Heart Failure
ABG
ECG = look for evidence of MI, ischemia, ventricular hypertrophy
Bloods
- BNP = >100ng/L
- Troponin
- TFT
- U+Es
ECHO = look for evidence of MI, valvular disease
CXR = cardiomegaly, pleural effusion, kerley B lines, perihiliar batwing shadowing, fluid in the fissures
How would you manage Heart Failure
Conservative
- Stop smoking
- Eat less salt
- Optimise weight and nutrition
Treat cause = dysrhythmia, valve disease
Treat exacerbating factors = anaemia, thyroid disease, infection, HTN
Avoid exacerbating factors = NSAIDs (fluid retention), verapamil (-ve ionotrope)
Medication
o Diuretics = furosemide (loop) – monitor U+Es
o ACEi = consider in all LVSD, if cough problems use ARB
o Beta-blocker = initiate after diuretic and ACEi
o Spironolactone = use in those still symptomatic despite treating with above
o Digoxin = for those with LVSD symptoms despite standard treatment
o Vasodilators
What are the complications of Heart Failure
25-50% of pts die within 5 years of diagnosis
How should acute HF be managed?
- Oxygen
- IV Furosemide + fluid restriction at 1.5L to offload
- IV diamorphine
- GTN infusion → CAREFUL → can drop BP → less commonly used
- Dobutamine → dual action → reduces the afterload of the heart + increases the inotropic force of the heart
- CPAP → type of NIV which delivers contrast + airway pressure to remove the extra fluid from the alveolar spaces