LVF Flashcards
LVF What is it? How does it Cause Congestion?
- It is one of the types of heart failure which affects the left ventricle. It is unable to contract strongly enough to force the blood into the aorta
- Failure of the left ventricles leads to poor ventricular contractions and therefore blood is backed into the lungs
- AAR this increases pulmonary vein hydrostatic pressure causing fluid to enter the alveoli (oedema) which reduces the gas exchange
- This can back up through the right side of the heart and eventually cause systemic venous congestion
Chronic vs Acute Heart Failure
Chronic heart failure is a long term condition which can develop from multiple causes eg age and co-morbidities. Acute heart failure can arise from another syndrome eg ACs or develop from a pre -existing heart failure diagnosis. Acute heart failure represents a decompensating patient.
Causes of AHF
- MI
- Hypertension
- ACS
- Disease of the mitral valve
- Bradyarrhythmia’s/tachyarrhythmias eg AF, VT
- Infection
- Drugs and toxic substances
- PE
- Chest trauma
What happens to the Heart in LVF
- LVF effects the hearts ability to effectively pump blood from the left ventricle is affected. as a result, the ejection fraction of the left ventricle can fall from 60-40%. Meaning the heart must work harder to pump the same volume of blood
- The ventricle wall structure can be altered due to complications causing hypertrophy (thickening of the walls), inflammation of the walls
Complications from LVF
- Pulmonary Oedema
- Heart valve complications - increased pressures in the heart disrupting blood flow
- Kidney damage - kidneys receive less blood which may lead to kidney failure
- Liver damage - fluid backing up from the heart can put pressure on the liver
Signs and Symptoms of Normal LVF
- Dysponea
- Worsening cough
- Worsening breathlessness at night
- Fine crackles/expiratory wheeze
- White/pink frothy sputum
- Peripheral oedema
- Abdominal Ascites
- Capnography - elevated CO2 retention, can sometimes see a tombstone shape that indicates the LVF is severe and they could be going into/in cardiogenic shock
- Fatigue - caused by medications like beta blockers, diuretics, calcium channel blockers, ACE inhibitors)
How is LVF Different to Other Heart Failures; Right, Biventricular, Chronic, Acute, Congestive
- Right - fluid backing up into the venous system (swelling to feet, ankles, legs, abdomen, increased urine, nausea, weight gain, loss of appetite)
- Biventricular - affects both sides, has symptoms of both right and left failure
- Congestive - happens when the heart can’t pump blood well enough for a normal supply, blood and fluid collects in the lungs and legs over time
- Chronic - heart failure that develops over time
- Acute - heart failure that occurs suddenly eg from an MI, drug/alcohol use, clots, inflammation of the heart
Primary Survey of AHF
A - may be audibly bubbly/wheezy, could be coughing and producing sputum, cyanosis
B - tachypnoea
C - may be pale/clammy
D - fatigue, confusion altered GCS in later stages
Red Flag Symptoms of LVF
- Orthopnoea - increased breathlessness on lying down. The pt may have slept in a chair for the preceding nights
- Paroxysmal Nocturnal Dyspnoea (PND) - waking up SOB at night, relieved by sitting up
- New dyspnoea - with PMH of MI/hypertension/angina
- New Peripheral Oedema - accompanied by dyspnoea
- Coughing up Pink, frothy sputum
3 Different Presentations of AHF
- 50% of patients show signs of congestion without hypoperfusion
- 45% of patients show signs of congestion with signs of hypoperfusion
- 5% of patients wont show any signs of congestion but may show signs of cardiogenic shock
Symptoms of Congestion Presentation
- Fine basal crackles
- Dull percussion
- Raised JVP
- S3 or S4 heart sounds
- Murmur
Symptoms of Hypoperfusion Presentation
- Hypoxia
- Tachypnoea and accessory muscle use
- Tachycardia
- Cyanosis
- Cold, pale and sweaty peripheries
- Oliguria
- Confusion/agitation
- Syncope/near syncope
- Narrow pulse pressure (25%/40 between di/sys)
General Pre-Hospital Management of LVF
- Pre-hospital diagnosis is very difficult
- Recognise the need for time-critical transfer
- Manage patients in fully upright position at all times (important)
- Oxygen therapy
- Do an ECG recording any abnormalities
The 3 Outcomes/Severity Management
- If no peripheral or pulmonary oedema with no increased WOB then consider referral to other services
- If pulmonary oedema and respiratory distress consider GTN, Frusemide, CPAP if available and consider oxygen therapy
- If showing signs of cardiogenic shock/hypotension/hypoperfusion transfer to local ed urgently - note most common cause is STEMI. Consider oxygen therapy
Treatments Based on Cause in LVF
- MI - medication controlled
- Valve problem - usually fixed by surgery
- Conductivity problems - pacemaker
- Lifestyle improvements - excersise, decreasing alcohol consumption