Heart failure
Download
Report
Transcript Heart failure
HEART FAILURE
“pump failure”
DEFINITION
Heart failure is the inability of the heart to
supply adequate blood flow and therefore
oxygen delivery to the peripheral tissues
and organs
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Only cardiovascular disease with
increasing incidence and prevalance
due to
Aging population
Increased survival after MI--thrombolysis
Improvement of medical and surgical
treatment
PATHOPYSIOLOGY
Heart is a pump which works with the
lungs.
It pumps blood from the heart to the lungs
to pick up oxygen.
The oxygenated blood returns to the heart
It then pumps blood out into the circulatory
system
CLASSIFICATION OF HEART FAILURE
This is based on:
How rapid symptoms develop---acute HF
---chronic HF
Which ventricle is involved---right side HF
---left side HF
Over all cardiac output---systolic HF
---diastolic HF
CLASSIFICATION ACCORDING TO ONSET OF
SYMPTOMS:
Acute heart failure
--characterized by a rapid onset of heart failure that may
occur following
1- MI
2-myocarditis
3-arrythmias
4- infection
5- PE
If it is not fatal may progress to chronic heart failure
Chronic heart failure
This results from the heart undergoing
adaptive responses to precipitating cause
and this cardiac response leads to
impaired function.
1- anemia
2-thyrotoxicosis
3-non compliance to medications
4- diet—high salt
CLASSIFICATION ACCORDING TO OVER
ALL CARDIAC OUTPUT
Systolic heart failure
The ventricle loses its ability to contract so
the heart is unable to pump forcefully
enough to get blood into the circulation.
Diastolic heart failure
The ventricle loses its ability to relax , the
muscle are stiff so the heart is unable to fill
with blood during resting cycle
CLASSIFICATION ACCORDING TO VENTRICLE
INVOLVED
Left side heart failure
This involves the left atrium, left ventricle,mitral
and aortic valve
Patient presents with
--- dyspnoe,orthopnoe and PND
--- basal crepitations
--- 3rd heart sound--gallop
Right side heart failure
This involves the right atrium, the right ventricle ,
the tricuspid and the pulmonary valve.
Patient usually does not present with dyspnoe ,
orhtopnoe or PND
Raised JVP
Clear lung field
Ascites
Lower limb edema
ETIOLOGY
Myocardial infarction
Coronary artery disease
Valvular heart disease
Idiopathic cardiomyopathy
Viral or bacterial cardiomyopathy
myocarditis
ETIOLOGY cont.
Pericarditis
Arryhthmias
Hypertension
Thyroid disease
Pregnancy
Septic shock
ETIOLOGY cont.
Toxins—anthracyclines
amphetamine
cocaine
Metabolic---haemachromatosis
wilson,s disease
pheochromocytoma
SYMPTOMS
NYHA classification of dyspnoe
Class 1—no shortness of breath {SOB}
Class 11—SOB on severe exertion
Class 111—SOB on mild exertion
Class 1v---SOB at rest
SYMPTOMS cont.{ FACES}
Fatigue
Activity decrease
Cough { specially supine,frothy red sputum
Edema
Shortness of breath { NYHA }
SIGNS
Non productive cough
Diffuse laterally displaced apex beat
Raised JVP
Hepatojugular reflex
Hepatomegaly
Resting tachycardia
Oliguria
Crepitations
Pleural effusion
Pulses alternans { severe cases}
S3 gallop
Unexplained weight gain
Ankle swelling
Ascites
INVESTIGATION
CBC
U+E
LFT
Cardiac enzymes
CXR
ECG
Echocardiogram
TREATMENT
Diuretics
Digoxin
ACE inhibitors
Vasodilators