Partial 4 - Heart Failure Flashcards
Preload
the pressure that the end diastolic volume exerts on the ventricles of the heart, and if it increases the force of contraction during systole increases.
Afterload
expressed as tension which must be developed in the wall of ventricles during systole to open semilunar valves and eject blood to aorta/ pulmonary artery. This is described by Laplace law
Systolic failure is characterized by
- Ventricular dilatation
- Reduced ventricular contractility (either generalized or localized)
- Diminished ejection fraction (less than 45%)
- In failing heart, the left ventricular end-diastolic volume (or pressure) may increase as the stroke volume (or CO) decreases.
Diastolic failure is characterized by
- Small or normal ventricular cavity size
- Myocardial contractility is normal or hyperdynamic
- Ejection fraction is normal (above 50%) or supranormal
- Ventricle is usually hypertrophied
- Ventricle is filling slowly in early diastole (during the period of passive filling)
- End-diastolic ventricular pressure is increased
Main causes of diastolic failure
Structural disorders; which can be intramyocardial (myocardial fibrosis, amyloidosis, hypertrophy, myocardial ischemia), or they can be extramyocardial such as constrictive pericarditis
Functional disorders; Where there is decreased relaxation of chambers (myocardial ischemia, advanced hypertrophy of ventricles, failing myocardium, asynchronism in heart functions).
Forward failure symptoms
result from inability of the heart to pump enough blood to the periphery (from left heart) leading to muscle weakness, fatigue, dyspnea, and oliguria, or to the lungs (from the right heart) leading to complications in gas exchange.
Backward failure symptoms
result from inability of the heart to accept the blood coming from periphery (right heart) leading to peripheral edema, hepatomegaly, ascites as well as increased nocturnal diuresis, and inability to accept blood coming from the lungs (left heart), leading to dyspnea, tachypnea, pulmonary edema which leads to arterial hypoxemia and hypercapnia.
Causes of left ventricular failure
Volume overload
Pressure overload
Loss of muscles
Restricted filling
Volume overload (Causes of left ventricular failure)
occurs in regurgitation of valves, and in cases of high output status
Pressure overload (Causes of left ventricular failure)
occurs in systemic hypertension, and in case of outflow obstruction
Loss of muscles (Causes of left ventricular failure)
occurs, in post MI, chronic ischemia, connective tissue diseases, infection, and poisons
Restricted filling (Causes of left ventricular failure)
occurs in, pericardial diseases, restrictive cardiomyopathy, and tachyarrhythmias.
Symptoms of Heart Failure
Dyspnea Orthopnea Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea Low cardiac output symptoms Abdominal symptoms such as anorexia, nausea, abdominal fullness Rt hypochondrial pain.
Physical signs of Heart Failure
- BP and occasional decrease in systolic BP
- Jugular vein distention
- Inspiratory rales
- Displaced and sustained apical impulses
- Third heart sound (low pitched sound heard during rapid filling of ventricle)
- Fourth heart sound (at the end of diastole)
- Pale, cold and sweaty skin.
Forms of Heart Failure
- Systolic and diastolic
- High output failure (which occurs in pregnancy, anemia, thyrotoxicosis, A/V fistula, Beriberi, and Paget’s disease)
- Low output failure
- Acute failure (large MI, aortic valve dysfunction
- Chronic failure.