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Transcript
Tim Sutton, Cardiologist
Counties-Manukau DHB and Auckland Heart
Group
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Exertional dyspnoea
Orthopnea
Paroxysmal nocturnal
dyspnoea
Oedema
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Third heart sound
Elevated JVP
Basal rales
Swollen ankles
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Temporal trend
Effort tolerance – NYHA classification
Functional class
Symptoms
I
No limitation of physical activity :
II
Slight limitation of physical activity :
III
Marked limitation of physical activity :
IV
Unable to carry on any physical activity without discomfort :
Ordinary physical activity does not cause undue breathlessness, fatigue or palpitations
Comfortable at rest, but ordinary physical activity does not cause undue
breathlessness, fatigue or palpitations
Comfortable at rest, but less than ordinary physical activity does not cause undue
breathlessness, fatigue or palpitations
Symptoms at rest can be present. If any physical activity is undertaken, discomfort is
increased
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ECG
Chest X-ray
Nt-proBNP :
◦ best done pre diuretic Rx / good renal function
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“Baseline bloods”
◦ FBC, U+Es, Glu, LFTs, INR, Albumen, TFTs and ferritin
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1) Assess LV size and function
◦ Systolic and diastolic
◦ Regional vs global
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2) Assess LV wall thickness
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3) Assess valve function
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4)Assess RV function
Dilated heart
Normal size
Preserved EF
Reduced EF
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Above 50-55%
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Mild 40-50%
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Moderate 30-40%
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Under 30% severe
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Under 20% very severe
Regional
Gobal
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Symptoms typical of HF
Signs of typical HF
Reduced EF
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Symptoms typical of HF
Signs of typical of HF
Normal of mildly reduced
EF and LV NOT dilated
Relevant structural heart
disease (LVH / LA
enlargement) and / or
diastolic dysfunction
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Sudden decompensation
◦ Patient often euvolaemic – right amount of fluid, just in
the wrong place
◦ Transient rise in left atrial pressure causing lungs to
flood with fluid (acute pulmonary oedema)
 Sub-acute
/ chronic
decompensation
 Did
the patient
previously
have a normal
heart?
◦ Gradual
accumulation of fluid – congestive state with
◦ Yes…..
Ischaemia
generalised fluid retention (oedema)
◦ No…… Ischaemia / arrhythmia / increased afterload etc
◦ Hypervolaemia – too much fluid all over the place
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What is the cause of the heart failure?
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What has triggered the presentation?
◦ De novo diagnosis
◦ Decompensation secondary to:
 Natural history of underlying condition
 Intercurrent factor
 Anaemia
Infection
Drugs
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Diagnosis : usually a chronic disease
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What is our treatment goal?
◦ “Our aim is to keep you as well as we can for as long as we can,
ideally leading as normal life as possible with no restrictions on
what you can do, with as few pills as possible, but as many as are
needed”
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Non pharmacological
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Exercise
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Diet – weight loss in the obese, but beware the malnourished
obese patient
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Salt “restriction” – stick to the RDA!
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Minimise / avoid environmental cardiotoxins
◦ Alcohol
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Metamephetamine
Smoking
No place for fluid restriction except in exceptional situations
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Is essential – regular : daily exercise improves
well being and
survivalshould put aside some
“A person
part of the day for the care of his
 Avoid extremes of dynamic exercise – only
body. He should always make sure
mild static exercise
that he gets enough exercise
especially before a meal."
 Patient can engage in a formal exercise
program – moderate intensity aerobic vs high
intensity interval training
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Diagnosis : usually a chronic disease
What is our treatment goal?
“Our aim is to keep you as well as we can for as long as we can,
ideally leading as normal life as possible with no restrictions on
what you can do, with as few pills as possible, but as many as
are needed”
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Non pharmacological
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Pharmacological
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Loop diuretics
◦ Use dose that maintains the patient oedema free
◦ Relieve dyspnoea, but usually do not need high doses
◦ Monitor for side effects
 Renal dysfunction / electrolyte derangement / gout
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ACE inhibitor / Angiotensin receptor blocker
◦ Any patient with impaired systolic function
◦ Optimal dose – depends on agent
 Cilazapril 2.5mg (od) Quinapril 10mg (bd)
 Losartan 50mg (od) Candesartan 16mg (od)
◦ Monitor renal function and electrolytes
◦ Start when euvolaemic
◦ Start low and go slow (increase every 2 weeks)
◦ Warn patient may feel slight worse for a few days
 If more breathless increase diuretic dose : sx should settle
◦ Aim for maximum tolerated dose
 Metoprolol CR 190mg (od)
Carvedilol 25mg (bd)
Bisoprolol 10mg (od)
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When is dose optimised for an individual?
◦ When maximum dose reached
◦ When heart rate in low 50s
◦ Hypotensive symptoms
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Can Beta-blockers be used in airways disease?
◦ Generally yes – survival benefit offsets risk : see improvement in lung
function
◦ Not in brittle asthmatics / marked airway hyper-reactivity
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Fatigue – but you can still do more than pre Rx?
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Hypotensive Sx – try and cut the other meds
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Erectile dysfunction – agents to assist
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Who: Anyone with symptomatic heart failure
due to impaired systolic function
Dose :
◦ Spironolactone (12.5mg), 25mg aim 50mg
◦ Eplerenone (25mg) 50mg aim 100mg
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Monitor for side effects
◦ Renal dysfunction / hyperkalaemia
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Maximum tolerated doses of
◦ ACEi / ARB
◦ Beta blocker
◦ Aldosterone receptor antagonist
◦ +/- diuretic
Fluid status
Weight
JVP
Lungs
Oedema
Postural BP
Renal
function
Hypervolaemia
Climbing
High
Rales
Present
May be a rise
with standing
Stable /
worse
Euvolaemia
Stable
Stable – may
be high if TR
Clear
Absent
No drop
Stable
Hypovolaemia
Falling
Low
Clear
Absent
Present
Climbing
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Digoxin
◦ reduces hospitalisation, but not survival
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Amiodarone
◦ only for symptomatic arrhythmia, otherwise shortens life
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Ivabradine (not in NZ yet)
◦ improves survival in those on optimal dose beta-blocker and HR >77bpm
at rest
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Nitrate and hydralazine
◦ Very old school!
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Is more common in:-
◦ Elderly
◦ Females
◦ Obesity / diabetes / hypertension
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Is the commonest cause of pulmonary
hypertension in the elderly
Prognosis just as bleak as for systolic dysfunction
◦ Stiff, non compliant heart : squeezes OK, but does
not fill well
◦ At rest is usually fine, but anything that increases
heart rate can causes symptoms
 Infection / anaemia / metabolic derrangement
 Exercise
 Atrial arrhythmias
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Prevention is better than needing to actually
treat!
No proven Rx once established
◦ Low dose diuretics
◦ Negative chronotropes to slow heart
◦ Spironolactone if Nt-BNP high (>300) and
symptoms
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Polypharmacy with potential side effects
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Takes 3-6 months to get right
◦ Drs much better with HF-ReF than HF-PeF!
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Treatment is usually for life
◦ There is a risk to suddenly stopping medication
◦ There is a risk to not taking pills and then taking OMT doses
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Multiple contacts with medical system
◦ Nurse / primary and secondary care
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Diagnosis : usually a chronic disease
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What is our treatment goal?
“Our aim is to keep you as well as we can for as long as we can, ideally leading as
normal life as possible with no restrictions on what you can do, with as few pills as
possible, but as many as are needed”
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Non pharmacological
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Pharmacological
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Prognosis /general issues that may not be
apparent initially
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In the absence of contraindications offered to
◦ Anyone who has survived a sudden cardiac death
◦ Has poorly tolerated VT / LV impairment and syncope that
is unexplained
◦ Anyone who has been on and adherent to OMT for three
months and has
 EF of under 30% if non ischaemic CM
 EF of under 35% if ischaemic CM
◦ Malignant familial history / genotype
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An ICD is permanent
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It is not an active therapy : it will not make the patient feel
better
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An ICD does not alter the natural history of the underlying
disease – one day pump failure will predominate and
consideration should be given programming shock therapy
off
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Not everyone wants an ICD – they do come with risks
◦ The patient should contact / attend their ICD clinic
 ICD will be read and rhythm reviewed
 May be a change in ICD settings
◦ The patient cannot drive a car for 6 months
◦ There may be a period of emotional lability /
depression or even post traumatic stress disorder
(more common after ICD storms)
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Not very common to see, but this will change
over time
Improves symptoms and survival
Wairua
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(Spiritual health)
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Tinana
(Physical Health)
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Whanau
(Family)
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Hinengaro
(Mental health)
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Class 1 or 6: Driving OK unless very
symptomatic
Class 2,3,4,5 or P endorsement: Generally
individuals will be unfit to drive – special
dispensation is available
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”If can mount 2 flights of stairs, reasonably quickly,
without too much problem then sex should be fine.”
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Keep GTN available (not with Viagra though).
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Activity is least likely to cause symptoms if engaged in
after a good night’s sleep and with the least affected
partner doing most of the work”
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Viagra is safe
Patient plus website – www.patient.co.uk
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Uncontrolled AF can cause heart failure
◦ AF induced tachycardiomyopathy
◦ Rate Rx vs restoration of SR
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The onset of AF can cause decompensation of
a previously stable cardiac condition
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Anticoagulation (in the absence of contraindications) is a
must
◦ Warfarin
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NOAC: Dabigatran, Rivaroxiban, Apixiban
Good rate Rx important
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Beta blocker
Digoxin
Amiodarone
Ideally avoid diltiazem
Interventional Rx : pulmonary vein isolation / CRT and AV nodal
ablation
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Only Rx aspirin / clopidogrel if proven vascular
disease
Anticoagulation with warfarin (INR 2-3) or NOAC
for
◦ Any proven AF
◦ Any patient with impaired EF and embolic event when in
SR
◦ Documented LV thrombus
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Renal dysfunction is common in patients with heart failure (Cardiorenal
syndrome)
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Multiple factors contribute
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Renal dysfunction can improve with treatment of heart failure
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Renal dysfunction in heart failure is not a contraindication for an ACEi / ARB,
but a reason for caution – can use spironolactone, but only with specialist
input due to risk of hyperkalaemia
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Balance risk of a slight worsening in renal function against benefits of
cardioprotective agents
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Actively treat iron deficiency
◦ Oral iron replacement may not be effect
◦ Iron infusion excellent way of treating
◦ No clear role for EPO or analogues as yet – may be
harmful
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Commonly coexist
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Central sleep apneoa common in CHF and
treatment of CHF can improve it
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OSA common – cannot easily assess until on OMT
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Baseline and post Rx ESS can be useful
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Variable data
Reasonable to continue if one is on a statin
Start if have ACS / high CV risk
But otherwise… just another pill, especially in
advanced heart failure
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Address the underlying cause as best as
possible – often multifactorial
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Correct the reversible – especially hypoxia
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Optimise Rx for left heart disease
Aries
Taurus
Gemini
Cancer
Avoid incisions in the head and face and cut no vein in the head.
Leo
Avoid incisions of the nerves, lesions of the sides and bones,and
do not cut the back either by opening and bleeding.
Virgo
Libra
Avoid opening a wound in the belly and in the internal parts.
Scorpio
Sagittarius
Avoid cutting the testicles and anus.
Capricorn
Aquarius
Pisces
Avoid cutting the knees or the veins and sinews in these places.
Avoid incisions in the neck and throat and cut no veins there.
Avoid incisions in the shoulders, arms or hands and cut no vein.
Avoid incisions in the breasts, sides, stomach and lungs and cut
no vein that goes to the spleen.
Avoid opening wounds in the umbellicus and parts of the belly
and do not open a vein in the back or do cupping.
Avoid incisions in the thighs and fingers and do not cut
blemishes and growths.
Avoid cutting the knees or the veins and veins in these places.
Avoid cutting the feet.
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Address the underlying cause as best as possible – often multifactorial
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Correct the reversible – especially hypoxia
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Optimise Rx for left heart disease
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Diuretics
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Best taken on empty stomach, 30 minutes before food
Frusemide vs bumetanide
Oral vs IV
Spironolactone
Metolazone – use cautiously and watch electrolytes
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Important to identify disease progression
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Review medications – any room to push further
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Acknowledge disease progression – this is not a failure of treatment, rather the natural
history of the underlying disease
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Any non essential medications that could be stopped
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Advanced care planning : review ICD status if present
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Advanced stages of heart failure are unpredictable and patients can survive months to
years with advanced Sx / poor prognostic markers – aim is to ensure they remain well,
but not to prolong suffering
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Patients with suspected heart failure – newly
diagnosed
Patients with known heart failure who are
◦ Deteriorating – sub-acute vs chronic
◦ Running into problems with medication side effects
◦ New onset AF
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Help further establish diagnosis and cause of heart failure
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Help initiate Rx and optimise Rx
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Discuss diagnosis and provide education
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Help establish chronic management plan
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Offer support through the early phase of the disease
management
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Provide follow up once on OMT – usually annual
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Community
◦ Review patients in their own enviroment / clinic
 Check for polypharmacy – drug inconsistencies
◦ Once stable – 3 monthly review :
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Check adherence to Rx and side effects
Review obs and weight chart
Lifestyle and psychosocial issues
Preventative programme : flu jab