LVF Flashcards

1
Q

LVF What is it? How does it Cause Congestion?

A
  • 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
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2
Q

Chronic vs Acute Heart Failure

A

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.

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3
Q

Causes of AHF

A
  • MI
  • Hypertension
  • ACS
  • Disease of the mitral valve
  • Bradyarrhythmia’s/tachyarrhythmias eg AF, VT
  • Infection
  • Drugs and toxic substances
  • PE
  • Chest trauma
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4
Q

What happens to the Heart in LVF

A
  • 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
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5
Q

Complications from LVF

A
  • 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
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6
Q

Signs and Symptoms of Normal LVF

A
  • 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)
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7
Q

How is LVF Different to Other Heart Failures; Right, Biventricular, Chronic, Acute, Congestive

A
  • 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
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8
Q

Primary Survey of AHF

A

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

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9
Q

Red Flag Symptoms of LVF

A
  • 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
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10
Q

3 Different Presentations of AHF

A
  1. 50% of patients show signs of congestion without hypoperfusion
  2. 45% of patients show signs of congestion with signs of hypoperfusion
  3. 5% of patients wont show any signs of congestion but may show signs of cardiogenic shock
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11
Q

Symptoms of Congestion Presentation

A
  • Fine basal crackles
  • Dull percussion
  • Raised JVP
  • S3 or S4 heart sounds
  • Murmur
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12
Q

Symptoms of Hypoperfusion Presentation

A
  • 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)
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13
Q

General Pre-Hospital Management of LVF

A
  • 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
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14
Q

The 3 Outcomes/Severity Management

A
  1. If no peripheral or pulmonary oedema with no increased WOB then consider referral to other services
  2. If pulmonary oedema and respiratory distress consider GTN, Frusemide, CPAP if available and consider oxygen therapy
  3. If showing signs of cardiogenic shock/hypotension/hypoperfusion transfer to local ed urgently - note most common cause is STEMI. Consider oxygen therapy
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15
Q

Treatments Based on Cause in LVF

A
  • MI - medication controlled
  • Valve problem - usually fixed by surgery
  • Conductivity problems - pacemaker
  • Lifestyle improvements - excersise, decreasing alcohol consumption
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16
Q

List of Differentials in LVF

A
  • Pericardial Effusion
  • MI *
  • Pneumonia/Chest Infection *
  • Exacerbation of COPD
  • PE *
  • Asthma