Heart Failure Flashcards
What risk factor is most commonly present with HF?
HTN (75%).
Name 4 common causes of HF.
- CAD/MI
- HTN
- Infection
- Congenital Heart Disease
What is the process of heart failure (7 steps)?
- Risk factors
- Vascular dysfunction
- Vascular disease
- Tissue injury (MI, HTN)
- Pathologic remodelling
- Organ dysfunction
- Organ failure
The HF cascade starts when initial damage to the myocardium (e.g. from an MI) starts the remodelling process. How does this lead to heart failure?
Damage weakens area, unable to withstand pressure. Dilation occurs, scarring and LV shape changes.
Over time, LV mass and volume increase (RAAS), negatively impacting function.
Considering that a stretch to the LV increases contractility (optimal sarcomere length), when does the LV dysfunction?
When it’s stretch so much that the actin / myosin don’t overlap and cannot contract.
What happens, physiologically in HF?
Increase length = decreased contractility = decreased CO.
HR and RAAS come in to compensate, but lead to LV hypertrophy.
FS Law plateau and no more compensation available.
What is systolic HF and what is it characterized by?
Contractile dysfunction: myocardium cannot contract.
EF < 40%.
What is diastolic HF? What are some common causes?
Compliance dysfunction: myocardium cannot expand during diastolic filling.
< SV, < CO.
EF normal.
CAUSES
- HTN w/ LV hypertrophy
- CAD
With pulmonary disease, it is possible to have associated R HF. How?
Chronic = RV hypertrophy, > RA pressure
Ancities
peripheral edema
-exercise can make worse due to increase venous return to backed up heart.
Name 5 major risk factors for HF.
- Age
- Sex (men)
- HTN
- MI
- DM
- Valvular heart disease
- Obesity
When referring to how the body deals with HF, acute means ___ and chronic means ___.
Uncompensated, compensated.
What happens in acute HF?
Rapid decrease in CO. Blood shift to pulmonary system.
Dyspena, edema, < activity.
What types of muscle changes occur with HF?
< flow to MS
- poor nutrition
- insulin resistance
- increased tumor necrosis factor (systemic inflammation)
RESULT
- < muscle mass
- > atrophy
- myopathy
What important effects does HF have that a PT should note?
- Depression
- Malnutrition
- Cognitive changes
- Increased ventricular arrythmias
What type of heart failure must a patient in to engage in exercise?
Compensated / chronic
-myopathy common