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Geriatric hearts

Geriatric hearts. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center Cardiac Issues 2011. Summary. Similar cardiovascular fundamentals but frequent treatment differences than younger patients. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center. Demographic boom and increasing longevity = more patients.

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Geriatric hearts

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  1. Geriatric hearts Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center Cardiac Issues 2011

  2. Summary • Similar cardiovascular fundamentals but frequent treatment differences than younger patients. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  3. Demographic boom and increasing longevity = more patients. • My practice: I routinely see about 1/3 of my patients in their 80’s and beyond, most fairly independent. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  4. If 80 and independent: averagelife expectancy is 5-10 more years. • Don’t sub optimally approach hypertension, cholesterol, and other risks. • For ex, statins have more prevention of events the older the patient. • Increasing side effects with age mandate more treatment discussions, more clinical details, including the patient’s individual goals and preferences. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  5. “Stiffitis” • Stiffer lipid-laden arteries beget systemic hypertension: • Which begets CAD/LVH/LAE/LV diastolic dysfunction. • Which begets elevated LV end diastolic pressure/LA/wedge pressure. • Which begets dyspnea/CHF/pulmonary hypertension • Which begets peripheral edema, and often A-fib, MI. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  6. Cardiovascular Stiffness • Results in quicker and higher exercise-induced hypertension • Quicker dyspnea on exertion. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  7. Diagnosis • Left atrial dilation is the “canary in the coal mine” • LA volume index to body size is initially more sensitive than LVH, pulmonary hypertension. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  8. Geriatric Hypertension • BP logs: • Truly do several times per day. • Expect increasing lability (autonomic dysfunction). • Foremost, avoid low blood pressure. • Quiz closely about light-headedness, check posturals, weights. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  9. Postural instability cofactors • Peripheral neuropathy • decreased eyesight • inner ear problems • posterior column degeneration of spinal cord • muscle weakness • arthritis Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  10. Geriatric hypertension treatment • Be a LOT less aggressive because of blood pressure lability • Minimize diuretics (compression stockings) • “Head more important than feet.” • Follow creatinine (declines with muscle mass) • Uric acid equals “pre-renal clue.” Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  11. HTN: Side Effects • Calcium blockers: constipation, edema, and negative inotropes. • Alpha blockers: postural hypotension, rebound. • Beta blockers: bradycardia, fatigue. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  12. Geriatric Hyperlipidemia • More near-term prevention the older the patient, so idealize lipids initially, but closely ask about tolerabilty. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  13. Statins • Generalized weakness or myalgias often multifactorial: • Vitamin D deficiency exacerbates, replenishment often alleviates • Some statin better than none Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  14. Lifestyle changes • (Late calories equal fat calories) Diet, weight loss, even five pounds helps. • 30 minutes daily: walk-exercise (even in-house, walker, everything helps). • Consider water-walking, arthritis-friendly exercise equipment. • Push all activities (gardening, shopping, socializing). Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  15. Geriatric Anticoagulation • Atrial fib incidence increases from less than 1% at age 40 to 20-30% age 80 upward. • Risk and benefit of anticoagulation both increase with age, merits careful discussions and documentation on each visit. • Consider fall history, instability, postural hypotension, ANY prior bleeding. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  16. Anticoagulation • Combination with antiplatelets: • Aspirin and warfarin dramatically increase bleeding risk (and clopidogrel addition even worse). • Strictly try to avoid triple therapy in elderly. • Ask about NSAIDS’s • Warfarin and antiplatelet RX decrease healing. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  17. Modified CHADS2 • One point now for ages 65-74, two points for 75 and above. • One point for hypertension. • Aspirin-only if zero points, warfarin if two points, consider warfarin if one point. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  18. Geriatric Intensity of Treatment • Code status and treatment limitations: • Hard to initiate talk, do often and sensitively, should be on EVERY CHART OF VERY OLD. • Put on home fridge their written wishes. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  19. Geriatric Intervention • Some not “too old” for intervention. • 1/3 of open heart valve patients typically over 80 in Yakima. • Sparkle factor and precise degree of “active.” • Beware of blob factor. • Ask “typical day” and their desires. • Primary care input critical. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  20. Dementia • Deal breaker for open heart surgery. • Primary care assessment helpful for intensity of treatment – consider medical treatment only for even acute MI. • Pacemakers typically an exception. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  21. Lifestyle Changes • Weight loss – Less strict goals for very old • Plump seems fine (weight loss often = muscle loss) • Follow girth more than weight. • Stress activity more than weight loss. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  22. Geriatric Exercise • Strength building, aerobic, all activities to “get moving.” • Cardiac rehab. • Water walk if balance issues/arthritis. • Walking in house/walker. Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

  23. Conclusions • Not too old for treatment • Stiff cardiovascular system = dyspnea • Increasing BP lability • Anticoagulation extremely individualized • Code status and treatment limitations Dave Krueger, MD Yakima Heart Center

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