Congestive Heart Failure Flashcards

1
Q

Define heart failure, and HFrEF vs HFpEF?

A

HF - physiology state insufficiency to meet needs of body and lungs

HFrEF - reduced ejection fraction -> EF <40% (systolic dysfunction)

HFpEF - preserved ejection fraction -> EF >45% (diastolic dysfunction)

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2
Q

What are some nonischemic causes of HF?

A

Anemia, thyroid disease, HIV, doxorubicin, amyloid, Fabry’s disease

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3
Q

What is cardiac index?

A

Cardiac output / body surface area

Normalizes cardiac output to the body surface area

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4
Q

What does heart failure classing vs staging do?

A

Classing - Class I-IV, based on severity of symptoms during activity. Easy to do, but changes day to day and can move back and forth.

Staging - A-D. Does not change based on how you’re feeling.

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5
Q

What are the stages of heart failure?

A

A - high risk for future HF
B - Structural disease w/ no symptoms
C - Previous symptoms, but medically managed
D - Refractory HF - special treatment required

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6
Q

Will all people with HF have rales and lower extremity edema?

A

No -> it is often well compensated by the lymphatic system. And these symptoms cna be nonspecific

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7
Q

What are the three best measures of heart failure on physical exam?

A
  1. Jugular venous distension (JVD)
  2. Pulsatile liver
  3. Hepatojugular reflex
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8
Q

What are pulsatile liver and hepatojugular reflex?

A

Pulsatile liver - can actually see the pulsations due to fluid overload

Hepatojugular reflex - pushing on the liver will increase the JVP by forcing blood into the IVC

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9
Q

What are nuclear SPECT and Cardiac PET good at detecting?

A

SPECT - see what areas are taking up dye and are working hardest, plus what the dilation pattern of the ventricle is

PET - looks at ischemia / viability of myocytes

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10
Q

What are cardiac MRI / cardiac CT good for?

A

Good for seeing amyloid deposition / restrictive cardiomyopathies

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11
Q

Why is it important to check for TSH and iron in labs?

A

Hyper / hypothyroidism as well as hemochromatosis represent reversible causes of heart failure.

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12
Q

Is BNP the gold standard for heart failure progression? How?

A

No, it’s not super sensitive / specific, don’t rely on it alone.

Normal is <50
Heart failure is >500

Issue is, BNP can start dropping off if you have structural changes in the heart so you can’t produce it as well

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13
Q

What are the fluid and sodium targets for HF?

A

Fluid restriction: <2 L/day

Na+ restriction: <2 gm/day, hardest part

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14
Q

Why is spironolactone so juicy?

A

Despite not being the best diuretic, it prevents fibrosis / remodelling of the heart tissue

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15
Q

What is an ICD / what is its function?

A

Implantable cardioverter defibrillator

  • > instantly terminates Vtach / Vfib if need be
  • > 1st line preventative treatment for sudden cardiac death
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16
Q

What is a BiV-ICD / CRT-D/CRT-P?

A

Biventricular implantable cardioverter defibrillator
or
Cardiac resyncronization therapy defibrillatory / pacemaker

Can pacemaker or defibrillate both ventricles if things get out of wack, depending on what patient prefers?

17
Q

What is OptiVol used for?

A

Monitoring of plasma volume to determine diuretic dose increase or decrease

“Optimal volume”

18
Q

What are LVAD / RVAD / BiVAD used for / how do they work?

A

They sit as mechanical devices in the abdomen, taking blood from the ventricle and pumping it in to the corresponding vessel

BiVAD = biventricular assitance device

19
Q

What is a total artificial heart? Can patient leave hospital?

A

A double pumping chamber connected directly to PA / aorta.

Patient cannot leave hospital, must wait for the heart for transplant.