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Download Diagnosis and Management of Heart failure in general practice
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Heart Failure in Primary Care Dr Selwyn Wong Cardiologist Ascot and Middlemore Hospitals Heart Failure – Definition/Diagnosis • HF is a clinical syndrome with symptoms/clinical signs/ some abnormality of cardiac structure and/or function • Patients presenting with suspected HF should undergo a full clinical assessment including history and examination. • Investigations may aid the overall clinical assessment - no single test Heart Failure - Evaluation • New-onset shortness of breath on exertion, orthopnoea or paroxysmal nocturnal shortness • Other symptoms lower extremity oedema, decreased exercise tolerance, unexplained confusion or fatigue in elderly, nausea or abdominal pain (ascites or hepatic engorgement). • The most specific signs of heart failure are elevated jugular venous pressure, a third heart sound and a laterally displaced apical impulse Heart Failure - Evaluation • Diagnosis difficult elderly, obese or have co-morbidities, milder symptoms (community) • History of causative factors (HTN, MI, valvular heart disease, AF) • SOBOE/ankle swelling common and non-specific • Orthopnoea/PND more marked decompensation and more specific. • Greater than 1 physical sign increases the likelihood of HF Heart Failure - Evaluation • May be few abnormal physical findings. • Elevated jugular venous pressure and a third heart sound most specific clinical signs. • Lower extremity oedema is a relatively non-specific finding, common in older people, and usually due to chronic venous insufficiency. • Other findings (tachycardia, irregular pulse, laterally displaced apical impulse; pulmonary rales) Heart Failure – Diagnosis in Primary Care • Symptoms and signs have limited sensitivity and specificity • Patients are often elderly with co-morbidity (esp. respiratory disease) • Investigations (CXR/echocardiography) may not be readily available. • Over-diagnosis of HF in the community is welldocumented. (Only one-quarter to one-third of patients whose GP suspect HF have the diagnosis confirmed on further cardiological assessment) Heart Failure - Investigations Electrocardiogram (ECG) Left axis deviation, AF, bundle branch block, LV hypertrophy and pathological Q-waves Chest X-ray Pulmonary vascular redistribution, cardiomegaly (cardiothoracic ratio >0.5), pleural effusions and interstitial oedema Heart Failure - Investigations • Full blood count: HF due to, or aggravated by, anaemia •Serum creatinine: renal dysfunction, either primary or secondary to cardio-renal syndrome •Serum sodium and potassium: monitoring in context of HF management •Serum albumin: oedema secondary to low serum albumin in nephrotic syndrome • Thyroid function tests: HF due to or aggravated by hypo/ hyperthyroidism B-type Natriuretic Peptide • BNP assists in the diagnosis of patients presenting with symptoms of suspected heart failure • BNP - synthesised by and released from the heart • Elevated plasma BNP/(NT-proBNP) associated with reduced LVEF, LV hypertrophy, elevated LV filling pressures, and acute MI and ischemia • Can occur in other settings • Sensitive to other biological factors, such as age, sex, weight, and renal function B-type Natriuretic Peptide • A normal BNP level makes the diagnosis of HF unlikely (rule out test) • A high BNP level makes the diagnosis of HF very likely (rule in or confirm test) • Intermediate values of BNP require careful interpretation, in light of patients age (consider age-adjusted cut-off values) and co-existing conditions. Echocardiography • Imaging of the heart for a patient with HF is a crucial part of the evaluation. • While use of BNP can aid in the early assessment of patients with suspected HF, this biomarker does not replace the need for cardiac imaging in a patient with confirmed HF. • Sensible use of BNP can improve selection of patients in whom HF appears likely and who will require further investigation, including with echocardiography. HF and Echocardiography Single most useful diagnostic test • LVEF – preserved or reduced • LV structure – normal or abnormal • Other abnormalities contributing (valve, pericardium, RV) • Regional wall motion abnormalities Heart Failure - Aetiology • Historically = impaired LV myocardial function • HF with preserved LV systolic function common • Coronary disease, hypertension and dilated cardiomyopathy cause the substantial proportion • Heart failure is the syndrome – underlying cause needs diagnosis Heart Failure - Aetiology • Coronary artery disease • Hypertension • Endocrine disorders, e.g. diabetes, hypo/hyperthyroidism, acromegaly, Cushing’s syndrome, aldosteronism, phaeochromocytoma • Valvular heart disease • Alcohol • Cardiomyopathies • Familial cardiomyopathy • Infections, such as viral myocarditis • Congenital heart disease • Infiltrative conditions, such sarcoidosis, amyloidosis, haemochromatosis • Drugs, such as cytotoxic agents • Nutritional, such as obesity, thiamine deficiency • Chronic arrhythmias, e.g. uncontrolled AF, or bradycardia (complete heart block) Heart Failure – Precipitating Factors • poor compliance with current management regime • anaemia • co-existing infections, such as pneumonia • arrhythmias, especially AF • concomitant drugs, such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, calcium channel blockers, corticosteroids and liquorice • alcohol excess • renal dysfunction and/or renal artery stenosis • unrecognised myocardial infarction • excess salt intake. Nomenclature – Ejection Fraction LVEDV 105 ml LVESV 78 ml EF = 26% LV Systolic Dysfunction Quantifying LV dysfunction - ejection fraction LV dysfunction Ejection fraction Nil (normal) >55% Mild 40-50% Moderate 30-40% Moderate-severe 20-30% Severe <20% Nomenclature - Symptoms NYHA classification of symptoms • Rest (class IV) • Less-than-ordinary exertion (class III) • Ordinary exertion (class II) • Levels of exertion that would limit normal individuals (class I) Neurohormonal activation Angiotensin II Noradrenaline Hypertrophy, apoptosis, ischaemia, arrhythmia, remodelling, fibrosis Lifestyle Management in Heart Failure • Dietary sodium should be restricted • Excessive fluid intake avoided • Alcohol intake limited Medication in Heart Failure - Diuretics • Symptomatic relief of fluid retention • Loop diuretics +/- thiazide • No randomised controlled clinical trials Medication in Heart Failure – ACE I • Multiple RCTs • Overall mortality reduction 25% - all NYHA classes and ACEs • ARBs if ACE intolerant Captopril Enalapril Quinapril Cilazapril Lisinopril Range 6.25-150 2.5-20 5-20 0.5-5 2.5-40 Frequency TDS BD BD OD OD Target 50mg tds 10mg bd 10mg bd 5mg od 20mg od β-Adrenergic Blocking Agents in HF LVEF % Change 15 10 5 0 -5 -10 0 6 12 18 24 Time (weeks) Initial hemodynamic deterioration followed by reverse remodeling (decrease in EDV and ESV) with improved ventricular function over time (increased LVEF) Effects of Different β Blocking Agents Pharmacological differences Sympathetic activation β1 receptors β2 receptors Bisoprolol Metoprolol Carvedilol Cardiotoxicity α1 receptors Medication in HF – Sprinolactone/ARBs RALES (Spirinolactone v Placebo) • NYHA 3-4, EF < 35% • 30% mortality reduction ,35% reduction in hospitalisation CHARM - Alternative, Added, Preserved Candesartan 4mg titrated up to 32mg • Overall 9% mortality reduction • CV death or CHF hospitalisation significantly reduced in Alternative and Added Medication in HF – Vasodilators/Digoxin Hydralazine plus nitrate therapy • HF and reduced LVEF unable to take both ACE inhibitor/ARB Digoxin • Decreased hospitalisation without mortality benefit • Symptomatic HF on appropriate therapy Heart failure - Management Assessment of LV function LVEF ≤ 40% Assessment of volume status Fluid retention No fluid retention Diuretic (to euvolaemia) ACE inhibitor B-blocker Spirinolactone/ARB Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction • Clinical heart failure with normal EF and evidence of diastolic dysfunction • 40-60% of heart failure • Evidence usually from echo • Increased with age, HTN, DM, obesity, IHD Diastolic Heart Failure – Difference • Neurohormonal treatments not effective • Prognosis less well defined • Morbidity in symptomatic patients may be equivalent • Asymptomatic LV diastolic dysfunction is prognostically important Specialist Referral • Younger patients • History suggests severe myocardial ischaemia or significant valvular disease • Diagnosis is uncertain • Aetiology is uncertain • Arrhythmias • Sudden onset of HF • Inadequate response to treatment Summary • Presentation and symptoms are varied • Syndrome diagnosis • BNP and echo – important roles • Medication to attain euvolaemia, then according to clinical trials • Specialist referal often appropriate