Heart Failure (Exam IV) Flashcards
Heart failure is a complex clinical syndrome resulting from any _______ or ______ impairment of ventricular filling or ejection of blood. The heart cannot meet metabolic tissue requirements or fill completely.
- Structural (Pericardium, myocardium, endocardium, heart valves, great vessels)
- Functional (Systolic, Diastolic)
HF w/ reduced EF (HFrEF). EF is < or equal _______ %
- 40%
HF w/ preserved EF (HFpEF). EF > or equal to _______%
- 50%
Characteristics of LV Diastolic Dysfunction.
- Increased myocardial stiffness
- Reduction in LV compliance
- Restricted LV filling
- Delayed LV relaxation (LV weakens over time)
What is the difference b/w HFrEF vs HFpEF?
- HFrEF is a systolic failure (pumping problem d/t eccentric remodeling)
- HFpEf is a diastolic failure (filling problem d/t concentric hypertrophy)
LV systolic dysfunction effects on
Contractility
SV
ESV
EDV
LV End Diastolic Pressure
- ↓ Contractility
- ↓ SV
- ↑ ESV
- ↑ EDV
- ↑ LV End Diastolic Pressure
LV Systolic dysfunction will lead to compensatory LV dilation → fluid back into LA → Pulmonary venous congestion.
Left atrial systolic and diastolic dysfunction effects on
LV compliance
LV pressure
LA pressure
- ↓ LV compliance
- ↑ LV pressures
- ↑ LA pressure to preserve LV filling
Over time, this dysfunction will dilate the LA and reduce LA compliance reducing LA filling. → Atrial Fibrillation
What will be the results of LV diastolic dysfunction?
- LA HTN
- LA systolic and diastolic dysfunction
- Pulmonary venous congestion
- Exercise intolerance.
What is systolic heart failure?
- Systolic dysfunction – decreased ventricular systolic wall motion
What are the causes of systolic heart failure?
- CAD
- Dilated cardiomyopathy
- Chronic pressure overload from aortic stenosis or chronic HTN
- Chronic volume overload from regurgitant valvular lesions or high-output cardiac failure
- Ventricular Dysryhtmias - LBB
Systolic Heart Failure will decrease EF.
The hallmark of chronic LV systolic dysfunction.
- Decrease EF, < 40%
What is diastolic HF?
- Abnormal ventricular relaxation (ventricles don’t relax as much) and reduced compliance
Causes of Diastolic HF?
- IHD
- Long-standing systemic HTN
- Progressive aortic stenosis
- Age dependent
Classes of Diastolic HF
- Class I - abnormal LV relaxation pattern with normal left atrial pressure
- Classes II, III, and IV - abnormal relaxation and reduced LV compliance, increasing LV End Diastolic Pressure
What is Acute Decompensated HF
- Worsening symptoms of a preexisting condition
Chronic HF that has gotten acutely worse.
What is de novo acute HF
- A sudden increase in intracardiac filling pressures and/or acute myocardial dysfunction
Example: Giant MI. This is an Emergent situation
CHF is present in pts with long-standing cardiac disease.
CHF is often accompanied by __________, but BP is maintained d/t adaptive mechanisms of action.
- Venous congestion
Frank-starling Relationship.
SV directly related to _______.
- LVEDP
The magnitude of the increase in SV produced by changing the __________of ventricular muscle fibers depends on myocardial ________.
- Tension; Contractility
How does SNS Activation maintain BP in CHF patients?
- Promotes arteriolar and venous constriction
- Arteriolar constriction
- The increased venous tone shifts blood from peripheral sites to the central circulation: ↑ Venous Return to LA
- ↓ Renal blood flow activates RAAS
↑ SNS activity contributes to the deterioration of HF in the long term
What is an Inotropic State?
- Myocardial contractility is reflected by the velocity of contraction developed by cardiac muscle.
What is Afterload?
- The tension the ventricular muscle must develop to open the aortic or pulmonic valve.
Systolic HF with a low CO will have a _________ SV.
Fixed
Systolic HF is a pumping problem. SV can’t increase to compensate for low CO. HR will need to increase CO.
Diastolic HF with tachycardia leads to decreased _______.
Cardiac Output
Diastolic HF is a filling issue. Tachycardia doesn’t allow the heart to fill adequately. Need to control HR in Diastolic HF.
In an attempt to counterbalance these mechanisms, the heart evolves into an “endocrine” organ. What hormones does the heart release?
- ANP (release from atrial muscle) - released d/t ↑ atrial pressure.
- BNP (release from atrial and ventricular myocardium)
- In the failing heart, the ventricle becomes the principal site of BNP production.
Physiologic effects of natriuretic peptides
- Diuresis
- Natriuresis (Na+ excretion)
- Vasodilation
- Anti-inflammatory effect
- Inhibition of the RAAS and SNS
ANP and BNP inhibit cardiac _______ and ________.
- Hypertrophy
- Fibrosis
This is the heart’s protective mechanism.