Tx of CHF Flashcards

1
Q

What are the treatment objectives in acute CHF?

A

1) Early recognition and treatment of contributing factors

2) Decrease symptoms (reduce pulmonary edema and increase CO)

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2
Q

What is the difference between nitroglycerin and nitroprusside?

A

Nitroglycerin is more of a venodilator, whereas nitroprusside is a potent arterial and venous vasodilator (it produces more balanced arterial and venous dilation). Nitroglycerin is used to reduce edema, whereas nitroprusside is used to increase CO by reducing afterload.

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3
Q

___________ reduce pulmonary congestion in acute CHF.

A

diuretics (specifically, loop diuretics)

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4
Q

When treating acute heart failure with diuretics, what should you do if a patient is resistant to a furosemide?

A

combine with a thiazide diuretic

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5
Q

What are the inotropic agents used to treat acute CHF?

A
  • Beta agonists (dobutamine, NE, dopamine)

- Phosphodiesterase inhibitors (inamrinone, milrinone)

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6
Q

What is the added benefit of using a PDE?

A

PDEs also

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7
Q

What are the treatment objectives in chronic CHF?

A

1) Early recognition of LVD
2) Prevent ventricular remodeling**
3) Decrease symptoms (reduce pulmonary congestion/edema and increase CO)
4) Prolong survival

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8
Q

________ improve survival in chronic LV dysfunction and CHF by slowing CHF progression and reducing mortality.

A

ACE inhibitors (when combined w/ Digoxin and diuretics)

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9
Q

What is the “newest” chronic CHF medication?

A

LCZ696 (combination of Valsartan and Sacubitril) - also known as ARNI

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10
Q

What are the actions of cAMP in cardiac muscle?

A
  • increased opening of L-type Ca2+ channels (inotropy)
  • increased reuptake of Ca2+ into SR stores (inotropy and lusitropy)
  • increased pacemaker current (chronotropy)
  • increased conduction rate (dromotropy)
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11
Q

How can ventricular remodeling be prevented in CHF?

A

Anything that blocks renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system!

  • ACE inhibitors/ARBs/LCZ696
  • Beta blockers
  • Aldosterone antagonists
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12
Q

True or false: Inotropic agents must be given in the setting of CHF.

A

False! We want to avoid inotropic agents because they can precipitate remodeling. Instead, digitalis is used as a last-ditch effort if CO cannot be increased in another way.

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13
Q

________ is a potent cardiomyocyte growth factor (hypertrophy) and fibroblast mitogen (hyperplasia).

A

Angiotensin II

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14
Q

How do ACE inhibitors reduce ventricular hypertrophy/remodeling?

A

They reduce systolic and diastolic wall stress, thereby decreasing stretch-induced remodeling.

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15
Q

What can be used for patients intolerant to ACEIs?

A

ARBs (losartan, valsartan, candesartan)

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16
Q

Why must beta blockers be used with caution in patients with CHF?

A

beta blockers result in decreased contractility, which is already an issue for CHF patients

17
Q

How do arteriolar vasodilators increase CO?

A

by reducing afterload (same beneficial effects as inotropes)

18
Q

Why are Ca2+ channel blockers contraindicated in acute CHF?

A

CCBs have negative inotropic effects (and HF patients already have problems with CO)

19
Q

What are digitalis glycosides mainly reserved for clinically?

A

to slow ventricular rate in patients with CHF and atrial fibrillation with rapid ventricular response

20
Q

What is the cardiac toxicity associated with digitalis?

A
  • DADs and abnormal automaticity

- Digitalis intoxication (VPBs, Vtach, junctional tachycardia)