1 / 81

ACUTE DECOMPENSATED HEART FAILURE : 2010 HFSA GUIDELINES

ACUTE DECOMPENSATED HEART FAILURE : 2010 HFSA GUIDELINES. BART COX, M.D., FACC ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO SCHOOL OF MEDICINE DIRECTOR, ADVANCED HEART FAILURE PROGRAM. DISCLOSURES. NONE. OBJECTIVES. UNDERSTAND THE DEFINITION OF ADHF

sian
Télécharger la présentation

ACUTE DECOMPENSATED HEART FAILURE : 2010 HFSA GUIDELINES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ACUTE DECOMPENSATED HEART FAILURE : 2010 HFSA GUIDELINES BART COX, M.D., FACC ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO SCHOOL OF MEDICINE DIRECTOR, ADVANCED HEART FAILURE PROGRAM

  2. DISCLOSURES NONE

  3. OBJECTIVES • UNDERSTAND THE DEFINITION OF ADHF • UNDERSTAND THE 4 HEMODYNAMIC PROFILES AND HOW TO CORRELATE THERAPY TO EACH PROFILE • UNDERSTAND METHODS OF DECONGESTION • UNDERSTAND THE USE OF IV VASODILATORS

  4. 2010 HEART FAILURE SOCIETY OF AMERICA GUIDELINES • JOURNAL OF CARDIAC FAILURE 2010; 16:475-539 (EXECUTIVE SUMMARY) • JOURNAL OF CARDIAC FAILURE 2010; 16: e1-e194 (COMPLETE GUIDELINE)

  5. ACUTE DECOMPENSATED HEART FAILURE (ADHF): DEFINITION • JACOBELLIS V. OHIO (1964) AND SUPREME COURT JUSTICE POTTER STEWART • NEW ONSET OR GRADUAL OR RAPIDLY WORSENING HEART FAILURE SIGNS OR SYMPTOMS REQUIRING URGENT THERAPY.

  6. HEART FAILURE STATISTICS • >5.5 MILLION HF PATIENTS IN USA • >650,000 NEW HF CASES ANNUALLY • ANNUAL US COST OF HF IN 2010 (DIRECT AND INDIRECT): $39.2 BILLION • 1 YEAR MORTALITY IS 20% • 5 YEAR MOTALITY IS HIGH AND WORSE FOR MALES • MALES: 59% • FEMALE: 45%

  7. ADHF STATISTICS • 1 MILLION ADHF HOSPTIAL ADMISSIONS ANNUALLY • ANOTHER 2 MILLION ANNUAL ADMISSIONS IN WHICH HF COMPLICATED THE PRIMARY DIAGNOSIS • 30-50% OF PATIENTS DISCHARGED WITH ADHF WILL BE READMITTED WITHIN 3-6 MONTHS

  8. ADHF STATISTICS • 50% OF ADHF ADMISSIONS HAVE LVEF > 40% • 50% OF ADHF ADMISSIONS HAVE LVEF < 40% • AVERAGE PATIENT ADMITTED WITH ADHF IS 75 YEARS OF AGE WITH SUBSTANTIAL COMORBIDITIES • MOST COMMON CAUSE OF ADHF HOSPITALIZATION IS EXACERBATION OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE • IN HOSPITAL MORTALITY: 4%

  9. 6 SLIDES OF BAD MEMORIES

  10. INTRODUCTION TO FILLING PRESSURES • VENTRICULAR FILLING PRESSURE: THE PRESSURE IN THE VENTRICLE AT THE END OF DIASTOLE • LEFT VENTRICULAR FILLING PRESSURE = PCWP, MEAN LA PRESSURE, LVEDP • RIGHT VENTRICULAR FILLING PRESSURE= CVP, MEAN RA PRESSURE, RVEDP

  11. INTRODUCTION TO FILLING PRESSURES • CONGESTION= SALT AND WATER RETENTION; FLUID OVERLOAD; • TO RELIEVE CONGESTION IN ADHF PATIENTS, DECREASE FILLING PRESSURES • TO DECREASE FILLING PRESSURES, DIURESE (OR ULTRAFILTRATE) AND VASODILATE

  12. FILLING PRESSURE IS THE PRESSURE AT THE END OF DIASTOLE

  13. INTRODUCTION TO PERFUSION IN ADHF • IN ADHF, PERFUSION IS A FUNCTION OF CARDIAC OUTPUT • CARDIAC OUTPUT= HR X STROKE VOLUME (SV) • STROKE VOLUME IS DEPENDENT UPON: • PRELOAD: THE AMOUNT OF BLOOD IN THE VENTRICLE AT THE END OF DIASTOLE • CONTRACTILITY OF THE VENTRICLE • AFTERLOAD: RESISTANCE TO VENTRICULAR EMPTYING

  14. INTRODUCTION TO PERFUSION IN ADHF • TO IMPROVE CARDIAC OUTPUT: • OPTIMIZE RATE AND RHYTHM (ELIMINATE BRADYCARDIA, TACHYCARDIA, AV DISSOCIATION) • OPTIMIZE PRELOAD (VENTRICLE NEITHER TOO FULL NOR TOO EMPTY) • IMPROVE CONTRACTILITY • DECREASE AFTERLOAD (DILATE RESISTANCE VESSELS)

  15. INTRODUCTION TO PERFUSION IIN ADHF • CARDIAC INDEX = CARDIAC OUPUT / BSA • TO IMPROVE PERFUSION, IMPROVE CARDIAC OUTPUT (OR INDEX)

  16. THE FOUR HEMODYNAMIC PROFILES

  17. RECOGNIZING THE FOUR HEMODYNAMIC PROFILES • NO CONGESTION = DRY • CONGESTION= WET • NORMAL PERFUSION=WARM • DIMINISHED PERFUSION=COLD

  18. PROFILES AND HEMODYNAMICS • DRY= PCWP < 18 AND RA PRESSURE < 8 • WET = PCWP > 18 OR RA PRESSURE > 8 • WARM= CARDIAC INDEX> 2.2 • COLD= CARDIAC INDEX < 2.2

  19. RECOGNIZING THE FOUR HEMODYNAMIC PROFILES • 2 COMPONENTS OF DECOMPENSATED HEART FAILURE • ELEVATED FILLING PRESSURES (MOST COMMON) • REDUCED CARDIAC INDEX (RARE)

  20. 2 MINUTE ASSESSMENT AND THE 4 HEMODYNAMIC PROFILES

  21. PRINCIPLES OF THERAPY IN A CONGESTED PATIENT: DECREASE THE FILLING PRESSURES • RELIEVE CONGESTION BY REDUCING FILLING PRESSURES • ABSENT CRITICAL ORGAN HYPOPERFUSION THAT LIMITS REDUCING THE FILLNG PRESURES, IMPROVING CARDIAC INDEX DOES NOT WORK!!!!

  22. PRINCIPLES OF THERAPY: THE OPTIMAL FILLING PRESSURE • OPTIMAL PCWP IS < 15-16 mm Hg; RA <8 • LOWERING FILLNG PRESSURES -> IMPROVED SV • WHAT’S WRONG WITH ELEVATED FILLNGPRESSURES? • RESPONSIBLE FOR CONGESTIVE SYMPTOMS • ACTIVATE NEUROHORMONES (RAS, SNS) • INCREASE VALVULAR REGURGITATION • RESPONSIBLE FOR PULMONARY HTN • CAUSES RIGHT VENTRICULAR DYSFUNCTION • CAUSES ABNORMAL LV FILLNG PATTERNS

  23. FILLING PRESSURES AND STROKE VOLUME (SV)

  24. STROKE VOLUME IMPROVED BY DECREASING MITRAL REGURGITATION

  25. Warm and dry

  26. Warm and wet

  27. PROFILE B: WET AND WARM • MOST PATIENTS PRESENTING WITH ADHF ARE PROFILE B • GOAL OF TX: SX IMPROVEMENT BY REDUCTION OF FILLING PRESSURES • FOR MAJORITY, IV DIURETIC TX IS THE MAIN INTERVENTION • MAY NEED TO ADD 2.5-10 mg METOLAZONE PO OR CHLORTHIAZIDE 500-1000 mg IV

  28. PROFILE B: ROLE FOR ADJUNCTIVE AGENTS • USE OF ADJUNCTIVE THERAPIES BEYOND DIURETICS HAS NOT BEEN DEMONSTRATED TO IMPROVE OUTCOMES IN HOSPITALIZED ADHF PATIENTS WITH PROFILE B • INOTROPES: ISCHEMIA/ARRHYTHMIAS/ DEATH • NESIRITIDE: EXPENSIVE PLACEBO • ENDOTHELIN ANTAGONIST: NO IMPROVEMENT • VASOPRESSIN ANTAGONIST: NO SUSTAINED BENEFIT

  29. PROFILE B: VERY HIGH OR VERY LOW SYSTEMIC VASCULAR RESISTANCE (SVR) • VERY HIGH SVR= > 1500 dyne/sec/cm-5 • HOW TO RECOGNIZE HIGH SVR: • HIGH BP • VERY NARROW PULSE PRESSURE • PA CATHETER MEASUREMENT • VERY LOW SVR (WITHOUT MEDS)= LOW BP + REASONABLE PULSE PRESSURE + WARM EXTREMITIES

  30. PROFILE C: COLD AND WET

  31. PROFILE C: COLD AND WET • < 3% OF PATIENTS PRESENT WITH CARDIOGENIC SHOCK • WET = CONGESTION (PCWP>18) • COLD = INADEQUATE PERFUSION (CI<2.2) • TX: YOU MAY NEED TO WARM THEM UP BEFORE DRYING THEM OUT • DIURESIS WILL IMPROVE CARDIAC OUTPUT • DIURESIS MAY NOT BE POSSIBLE IF RENAL PERFUSION IS SEVERELY IMPAIRED • WHAT TO USE: VASODILATOR OR INOTROPE? • CHECK THE SVR AND LOOK AT THE BLOOD PRESSURE

  32. PROFILE C: IV VASODILATORS OR INOTROPES? • CHOICE OF THERAPY DEPENDS ON SYSTEMIC VASCULAR RESISTANCE AND BP • IF SVR IS HIGH, CHECK THE SBP • SBP>85mm Hg: VASODILATOR • SBP<85 mm Hg: INOTROPE + IABP (INTRAORTIC BALLOON PUMP)

  33. PROFILE L: COLD AND DRY

  34. PROFILE L: COLD AND DRY • EXTREMELY RARE PRESENTATION • REQUIRES PA CATHETER PLACEMENT TO EVALUATE FILLING PRESSURE • PCWP<12 AND RA<6: DC DIURETICS, PO FLUIDS • PCWP >16: PROFILE C • PCWP 12-16 + RA PRESSURE NORMAL: • VASODILATORS , IABP, AND INOTROPE ARE TEMPORARY FIX • NEEDS VAD/ TRANSPLANT EVALUATION

  35. DIURETICS

  36. HFSA GUIDELINE: HOW TO DIURESE • DIURESE WITH IV LOOP DIURETIC • ULTRAFILTRATION MY BE USED IN LIEU OF IV DIURETICS • DIURESE UNTIL DRY • DIURESE AT THE CORRECT RATE

  37. THE DOSE TRIAL: BOLUS OR INFUSION, LOW DOSE OR HIGH DOSE?

  38. Kaplan–Meier Curves for the Clinical Composite End Point of Death, Rehospitalization, or Emergency Department Visit . Felker GM et al. N Engl J Med 2011;364:797-805

  39. HFSA GUIDELINES: WHAT TO MONITOR DAILY DURING IV DIURESIS • MONITORING OF INTAKE & OUTPUT AND DAILY WEIGHT IS RECOMMENDED TO ASSESS CLINICAL EFFICACY OF DIURETIC THERAPY • ROUTINE USE OF A FOLEY CATHETER IS NOT RECOMMENDED FOR MONITORING VOLUME STATUS • OBSERVE FOR DEVELOPMENT OF DIURETIC-INDUCED SIDE EFFECTS • DAILY Na, K, Mg, RENAL FUNCTION, AND ORTHOSTATIC VITALS

  40. HEISENBERG’S UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE • REGARDING SUBATOMIC PARTICLES, YOU MAY KNOW THE EXACT POSITION OR THE EXACT VELOCITY BUT YOU CAN NEVER KNOW SIMULTANEOUSLY THE EXACT POSITION AND THE EXACT VELOCITY

  41. COX’S UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE • YOU MAY HAVE AN ACCURATE DAILY WEIGHT, OR YOU CAN HAVE AN ACCURATE DAILY INTAKE AND OUTPUT, BUT YOU WILL NEVERSIMULTANEOUSLY HAVE AN ACCURATE INTAKE AND OUTPUT AND WEIGHT

  42. DIURETIC SIDE EFFECTS • ELECTROLYTE ABNORMALITEIS • HYPOKALEMIA • HYPOMAGNESEMIA • HYPONATREMIA • HYPOTENSION • GOUT EXACERBATION • HEARING LOSS (RARE) • INCREASED INCIDENCE OF DIGOXIN TOXICITY • RENAL INSUFFICIENCY • MUSCLE CRAMPS ARE USUALLY DUE TO OVERLY RAPID DIURESIS

  43. HFSA GUIDELINES: VOLUME OVERLOAD, RENAL DYSFUNCTION, AND DIURETIC USE • PATIENTS WITH MODERATE – SEVERE RENAL DYSFUNCTION AND EVIDENCE OF FLUID RETENTION SHOULD CONTINUE TO BE TREATED WITH DIURETICS

  44. CARDIORENAL SYNDROME: OUTDATED AND INCOMPLETE EXPLANATION

  45. CARDIORENAL SYNDROME: THE CURRENT EXPLANATION

  46. HFSA GUIDELINES: DESTROYING DIURETIC RESISTANCE • DIAGNOSE IT: ARE THEY TRULY WET? • DECREASE THE Na AND FLUID INTAKE • DOSE IT: INCREASE DOSE OF DIURETIC • DRIP IT: FUROSEMIDE DRIP AT 5-20 mg/hr • DOUBLE THE SITE OF ACTION : ADD 5-10 mg po METOLAZONE OR IV CHLORTHIAZIDE 500-1000 mg • DEVICE IT: AQUAPHERESIS/ ULTRAFILTRATION

  47. THE DIET AND FLUID RESTRICTION • 2 GRAM SODIUM DIET • 2 LITER/DAY FLUID RESTRICTON

  48. WHAT ABOUT HYPONATREMIA • SODIUM < 137 mEq/L ASSOCIATED WITH PROLONGED HOSPITALIZATION AND INCREASED IN-HOSPITAL MORTALITY • IN GENERAL, HYPONATREMIA IS ASSOICIATED WITH DEATH, HIGH REHOSPITALIZATION, LONGER HOSPITAL STAYS, NEUROCOGNITIVE CHANGES, AND RENAL/HEPATIC DYSFUNCTION • MOST HYPONATREMIC PATEIENTS WITH ADHF ARE VOLUME OVERLOADED

  49. WHAT ABOUT HYPONATREMIA? • ETIOLOGY: INABILITY TO EXCRETE FREE H20 PRIMARILY DUE TO NEUROHORMONAL ACTIVATION • NOREPI, ANGIOTENSIN II, AVP • HYPONATREMIA IS A MARKER FOR POOR CARDIAC OUTPUT AND NEUROHORMONAL ACTIVATION

  50. TREATING HYPONATREMIA IN ADHF • WATER RESTRICTION< 2 L/DAY • MAXIMIZE ACEI OR ARB • VASOPRESSIN ANTAGONIST (TOLVAPTAN) RESERVED FOR ADHF WITH HYPONATREMIA CAUSING SIGNIFICANT COGNITIVE SYMPTOMS

More Related