Heart Failure Flashcards

1
Q

Classifications of HF

A

left - right
acute - chronic
low output (heart issue) - high output (high O2 demand)
reduced EF/systolic - preserved EF/diastolic

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2
Q

Left sided HF symotoms

A
Dyspnoea and poor ETT 
Fatigue
Orthopnea and PND 
Nocturnal cough, wheeze 
Nocturia (ask during the day decresed renal plasma flow and at night when lying this increases = more filtration)
Cold peripheries
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3
Q

Right sided HF symptoms

A

peripheral oedema
ascites
Nausea and anorexia (due to hepatic congestion)
facial engorgement, neck pulsitation - large A wave
expstaxis (due to increased pressure)

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4
Q

Precipitants to HF?

A

Cardiac:

  • arrhythmia
  • MI
  • valvular disease/rheumatic HD
  • LHF causing RHF
  • HTN
  • cardiomyopathy/congential

Respiratory

  • COPD (cor pulmonale)
  • PE

Medications:

  • stopping diuretics
  • Meds causing salt retention (NSAIDs)

Other:

  • anaemia
  • thyrotoxicosis
  • infection or fever
  • anaesthesia/surgery
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5
Q

Risk factors for HF

A

HTN, lyperlipidaemia, DM, smoking, obesity, inactivity, CAD, family Hx, high EtOH (dilated cardiomyopathy), haemochromotosis

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6
Q

HF examination:

A
RHF = pitting oedema, JVP, ascites, heptomegaly (congestion) 
LHF = cyanosis, cool peripheries, crackles in lung bases, stony dullness (effusion)
BOTH= murmur, conjunctival/palor crease pallor, AF, parasternal heave, cheyne-stokes breathing, displaced apex, S3 (low pitched @ apex)
lying standing BP
?pacemaker or defib 
cardiac cachexia (weight loss due to HF)

Resp exam
PVD exam

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7
Q

Diagnosis and classification

Differentials?

A
NYHA class I-IV
DD: nephrotic syndrome, liver disease, if only LHF think of any lung disease (eg. pneumonia, COPD)
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8
Q

Investigations

A

Bloods:

  • Hb to exclude anaemia
  • Electrolytes and Creatinine = hyperkalaemia causing arrhythmia, hyponatraemia indicating severe long standing cardiac failure
  • BNP can distinguish cardiac vs non
  • Cr and eGFR ?renal failure as a cause or consequence and ok to take medications
  • TFT ?thyrotoxicosis as precipitant

Imaging:
CXR - abcde

Other:

  • daily weights
  • ECG - ?arrhythmia, ?old infarct, ?LVH or LBBB
  • ECHO - estimate EF and help identify cause
  • coronary angiography +/- ETT to exclude CAD
  • RV biopsy (rare)
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9
Q

Management: acute and semi-acute

A

ACUTE:
sit up right, morphine, O2, GTN, Frusemide +/- thiazide, DON’T GIVE Beta Blockers

Semi-Acute:

  • rate control arrhythmia (ICD or metoprolol)
  • thrombolysis for acute infarct
  • CABG or angioplasty for ischaemia
  • med review
  • control thyroid disease
  • valve replacement
  • transfusion for anaemia
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10
Q

NP chronic management?

A
bed rest if unwell 
low salt diet 
fluid restrict (1-1.5L) 
control other CVD risk factors 
annual influenza vaccine
educate around symptoms and have action plan for exacerbations
ACP/Resus
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11
Q

P chronic management

A
  1. Frusemide
  2. ACEi or Beta Blocker
  3. add other
  4. spironolactone
  5. ARB/digoxin/anticoag
  • ARB if ACEi not tolerated
  • Avoid Ca channel blockers (negative inotrope)
  • Avoid NSAIDs - can worsen renal function

Symptom improvement:
diuretics, beta blockers, ACEi, hydralazine + nitrate, dig, spiro

Survival benefit:
beta blockers, ACEi, hydralazine + nitrates, spironolactone

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