Verified By Apollo Hospitals September 17, 2024
Heart failure is quite different from a heart attack. Heart failure is not a disease by itself but a constellation of various signs and symptoms caused by a wide variety of disorders that includes valvular, heart muscle, pericardial (covering layer of heart) and other non-cardiac (unrelated to heart) diseases. The onset and severity of congestive heart failure symptoms depends on the nature of the underlying cardiac disease and the rate at which this develops.
Heart failure is a problem on the rise as:
The presentation of heart failure may be sudden (acute( or over a period of time (chronic). Heart failure can occur with normal pumping capacity of heart but where there is still a failure to relax normally (diastolic heat failure where ejection fraction or pumping capacity is near normal). Poor pumping capacity of the heart (systolic heat failure) is also one of congestive heart failure causes.
It becomes an emergency when the patient presents with acute heart failure and when it occurs in the background of angina or heart attacks or with severe high blood pressure.
Most of the symptoms and signs of heart failure are due to congestion and fluid collection in the lungs, legs, abdomen etc and the inability of the heart to pump efficiently to meet the demands of the organs and tissues in the body. There is a mismatch between demand and supply.
There could be breathlessness, which could be an exaggerated uncomfortable awareness of breathing.
The description of this sensation is various: –
This may come on during exertion in early stages of the disease but may occur at rest when the disease is advanced. There could be breathlessness occurring in lying posture that is relieved on sitting up. Patients state that they have to sleep on three or more pillows to feel comfortable at night. And then there could be what we call in technical parlance as Paroxymal Nocturnal Dyspnoea (PND) which usually starts 2-4 hours after onset of sleep. Patients develop cough and sweating with breathlessness, which is relieved by getting out of bed. Fatigue and impaired effort capacity are other prominent symptoms of heart failure. Patients may also report abdominal fullness, leg swinging, nausea and loss of appetite.
The physician diagnoses heart failure based on the symptoms that the patients present with and the signs he observes while he examines the patient. The patient may have prominent neck veins, leg swelling, may appear breathless, have increased heart rate and respiratory rate, cold clammy hands and feet, enlargement of liver, wheezing etc.
Once the clinical suspicion of heart failure is entertained, certain tests are carried out to ascertain the presence and cause of heart failure. In a new patient with suspected heart failure a blood test is done to assess BHP (Brain Natriuretic Peptide); if it is raised more than 100 pg/ml, there is a strong possibility of heart failure. ECG and Chest X ray are routinely done and an echocardiogram reveals the functioning of the heart. A nuclear scan of the heart called MUGA scan accurately assesses the pumping efficacy of the heart. An evaluation for precipitating efficacy of the heart. An evaluation for precipitating factors is also done, with specific tests to rule out reversible causes such as metabolic or hormonal disturbances and infection.
Congestive Heart Failure Treatments involves removal of the underlying cause, removal of the precipitating factors and containing the disease. General measures include rest, administration of O2, sedation, salt and fluid restriction.
Drugs that:
Surgical treatment includes treatment for ischemia (Coronary Artery Bypass Graft surgery), valvular disease surgery to restore heart size and geometry and ventricular assist devices. Heart Trasplantation is the last option.
The loss of synchronized contraction of the left and right ventricle of the heart in a patient with heart failure can be rectified by implanting a pacemaker (Triple chamber pacemaker) which improves the overall pumping efficacy of the heart by making the right and left sides of the heart contract in a synchronized manner. This cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) gives symptom relief, improves survival as well as decreases the number of hospitalizations in a patient with heart failure.
Heart failure management is complex. It needs a multidisciplinary approach, which includes patient education, dietary advice, treatment by the best heart surgeons, medication dose adjustment and home visits to ultimately deliver cost effective treatment to reduce morbidity and recurrent hospitalization.
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