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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chronic heart failure
(
CHF
) remains an important and increasing public health care problem. It is a complex syndrome affecting many body systems. Body wasting (i.e., cardiac cachexia) has long been recognised as a serious complication of
CHF
. Cardiac cachexia is associated with poor prognosis, independently of functional disease severity, age, and measures of exercise capacity and cardiac function. Patients with cardiac cachexia suffer from a general loss of fat tissue, lean tissue, and bone tissue. Cachectic
CHF
patients are weaker and
fatigue
earlier, which is due to both reduced skeletal muscle mass and impaired muscle quality. The pathophysiologic alterations leading to cardiac cachexia remain unclear, but there is increasing evidence that metabolic, neurohormonal and immune abnormalities may play an important role. Cachectic
CHF
patients show raised plasma levels of epinephrine, norepinephrine, and cortisol, and they show high plasma renin activity and increased plasma aldosterone level. Several studies have also shown that cardiac cachexia is linked to raised plasma levels of tumour necrosis factor alpha and other inflammatory cytokines. The degree of body wasting is strongly correlated with neurohormonal and immune abnormalities. The available evidence suggests that cardiac cachexia is a multifactorial neuroendocrine and metabolic disorder with a poor prognosis. A complex imbalance of different body systems may cause the development of body wasting.
...
PMID:Cardiac cachexia. 1551 2
Chronic heart failure
is a common problem in old age. Dyspnoea and
fatigue
are the most common symptoms and should alert the clinician to the likely diagnosis. When there is a clinical suspicion of heart failure, further assessment is required to confirm the aetiology. In older patients, heart failure with normal systolic function is frequently encountered. However, patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction usually have a poorer prognosis, and most treatments have been evaluated in these patients. Useful investigations include the 12-lead electrocardiogram, chest radiology and echocardiography. A blood test for B-type natriuretic peptide is being increasingly used as a 'rule out' test for heart failure. There are several treatment options. Initially, patients should be treated with a diuretic and ACE inhibitor, provided there are no contraindications. beta-Blocker therapy is also first-line therapy once a patients' haemodynamic status has been stabilized. Additional treatments include spironolactone, angiotensin antagonists and digoxin. Patient factors and tolerability may limit the number of treatment options. Treatment regimes are most effective when delivered using a multidisciplinary approach.
...
PMID:The diagnosis and management of chronic heart failure in the older patient. 1649 10
Chronic heart failure
(
CHF
), the new epidemic in cardiology, is characterized by energetic failure of both cardiac and skeletal muscles. The failing heart wastes energy due to anatomical changes that include cavity enlargement, altered geometry, tachycardia, mitral insufficiency and abnormal loading, while skeletal muscle undergoes atrophy. Cardiac and skeletal muscles also have altered high-energy phosphate production and handling in
CHF
. Nevertheless, there are differences in the phenotype of myocardial and skeletal muscle myopathy in
CHF
: cardiomyocytes have a lower mitochondrial oxidative capacity, abnormal substrate utilisation and intracellular signalling but a maintained oxidative profile; in skeletal muscle, by contrast, mitochondrial failure is less clear, and there is altered microvascular reactivity, fibre type shifts and abnormalities in the enzymatic systems involved in energy distribution. Underlying these phenotypic abnormalities are changes in gene regulation in both cardiac and skeletal muscle cells. Here, we review the latest advances in cardiac and skeletal muscle energetic research and argue that energetic failure could be taken as a unifying mechanism leading to contractile failure, ultimately resulting in skeletal muscle energetic failure, exertional
fatigue
and death.
...
PMID:Heart failure: a model of cardiac and skeletal muscle energetic failure. 1676 67
Chronic heart failure
(
CHF
) patients frequently experience impaired exercise tolerance due to skeletal muscle
fatigue
. Studies suggest that this in part is due to intrinsic alterations in skeletal muscle of
CHF
patients, often interpreted as a disease-specific myopathy. Knowledge about the mechanisms underlying these skeletal muscle alterations is of importance for the pathophysiological understanding of
CHF
, therapeutic approach and rehabilitation strategies. We here critically review the evidence for skeletal muscle alterations in
CHF
, the underlying mechanisms of such alterations and how skeletal muscle responds to training in this patient group. Skeletal muscle characteristics in
CHF
patients are very similar to what is reported in response to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), detraining and deconditioning. Furthermore, skeletal muscle alterations observed in
CHF
patients are reversible by training, and skeletal muscle of
CHF
patients seems to be at least as trainable as that of matched controls. We argue that deconditioning is a major contributor to the skeletal muscle dysfunction in
CHF
patients and that further research is needed to determine whether, and to what extent, the intrinsic skeletal muscle alterations in
CHF
represent an integral part of the pathophysiology in this disease.
...
PMID:Intrinsic skeletal muscle alterations in chronic heart failure patients: a disease-specific myopathy or a result of deconditioning? 2199 79
Chronic heart failure
affects around 750000 people per year in the UK. Despite the development of evidence-based treatments the 1-year survival rate is poorer than for many common cancers. Quality of life is poor, with breathlessness, peripheral oedema and
fatigue
being common symptoms. Through clinical audit a community heart failure nurse identified that the palliative care needs of patients with advanced heart failure were not being adequately addressed in his locality. A more cohesive way of managing these patients was required. Joint working between heart failure and palliative care clinicians as well as the development of an advanced heart failure shared care pathway and supporting tools resulted in patients with heart failure having improved access to palliative care, more of these patients dying in their preferred place of care, and the provision of a holistic heart failure service spanning referral to end of life. The impact of chronic heart failure on both individual patients and the NHS is considerable. With interdisciplinary and interorganisational collaboration, a new approach to managing patients with heart failure has been developed that has resulted in improved patient care.
...
PMID:Development of an end-of-life care pathway for patients with advanced heart failure in a community setting. 2288 3
Chronic heart failure
(
CHF
) is characterized as a clinical disorder displaying exercise intolerance; patients typically complain of early muscular
fatigue
. Previously, it was thought to be simply a failure of perfusion to the exercising musculature and consequent early onset of intramuscular acidosis in
CHF
. However, improved hemodynamics by cardiotonic agents did not lead to an increase in exercise tolerance. Later studies have shown that intrinsic skeletal muscle abnormalities exist in patients with
CHF
and could induce the early anaerobic metabolism that limits exercise tolerance. We review the clinical importance of skeletal muscle abnormalities in patients with
CHF
. Considering the significance of peripheral muscle abnormalities and their development might help physicians and researchers better understand the mechanisms of well-established exercise training and pharmacological therapies that have been shown to improve the prognosis for
CHF
, and thus develop potential novel therapies.
...
PMID:Exercise intolerance in chronic heart failure--skeletal muscle dysfunction and potential therapies. 2333 7
Chronic heart failure
(
CHF
) is a complex clinical syndrome leading to exercise intolerance due to muscular
fatigue
and dyspnea. Hemodynamics fail to explain the reduced exercise capacity, while a significant skeletal muscular pathology seems to constitute the main underlying mechanism for exercise intolerance in
CHF
patients. There have been proposed several metabolic, neurohormonal and immune system abnormalities leading to an anabolic/catabolic imbalance that plays a central role in the pathogenesis of the wasting process of skeletal muscle myopathy. The impairment of the anabolic axes is associated with the severity of symptoms and the poor outcome in
CHF
, whereas increased cortisol levels are predictive of exercise intolerance, ventilatory inefficiency and chronotropic incompetence, suggesting a significant contributing mechanism to the limited functional status. Exercise training and device therapy could have beneficial effects in preventing and treating muscle wasting in
CHF
. However, specific anabolic treatment needs more investigation to prove possible beneficial effects.
...
PMID:Exercise intolerance in chronic heart failure: the role of cortisol and the catabolic state. 2429 34
Chronic heart failure
(
CHF
) can be defined as a complex of symptoms and signs caused by cardiac dysfunction. Dyspnoea on exertion,
fatigue
, reduced exercise tolerance and fluid retention are hallmarks of the syndrome. Reduced peripheral blood flow, endothelial dysfunction, alterations in skeletal muscle structure and function, an increased activity of the muscle ergoreflex, as well as autonomic and neurohormonal activation reduce exercise performance, ultimately leading to physical deconditioning in
CHF
patients. The beneficial effects of physical training for
CHF
patients are increasingly acknowledged. Based on European and American guidelines on physical training in
CHF
, results from controlled randomised trials (summarised in this paper) and expert opinions, the Dutch Committee on Cardiac Rehabilitation has formulated statements on physical training in
CHF
. In addition, recommendations implementing physical training programmes in
CHF
patients are given. The selection criteria, contraindications and methods, and duration of a physical training programme in heart failure are discussed. Concomitant with the training programme, a multidisciplinary intervention programme is needed to stimulate patients to adopt and maintain an active and healthy lifestyle.
...
PMID:Physical training in patients with chronic heart failure: An elaboration of the statements from the Committee on Cardiac Rehabilitation of the Netherlands Society of Cardiology and the Netherlands Heart Foundation and review of studies on physical training in chronic heart failure. 2569 46
Chronic heart failure
is a common and complex clinical syndrome that results from impaired cardiac relaxation or contraction. There have been considerable advances in the management of chronic heart failure; however, the mortality rate remains high. Patients with chronic heart failure may experience multiple debilitating symptoms, such as
fatigue
, pain, and peripheral oedema. However, breathlessness may be considered the most debilitating symptom. The management of chronic heart failure aims to improve the patient's quality of life by reducing symptoms and supporting the patient to manage their condition. Treatment of patients with chronic heart failure may involve a combination of pharmacological therapy, device implantation and cardiac rehabilitation. This is the second of two articles on chronic heart failure. Part 1 discussed the pathophysiology of chronic heart failure, its causes, assessment, signs and symptoms. Part 2 outlines the treatment and management of patients with the condition, including pharmacological strategies, device implantation, lifestyle modification, cardiac rehabilitation and palliative care.
...
PMID:Chronic heart failure part 2: treatment and management. 2807 7
Chronic heart failure
is a common and complex clinical syndrome that results from impaired cardiac relaxation or contraction. Patients with chronic heart failure may experience multiple debilitating symptoms, such as
fatigue
, pain, and peripheral oedema. However, breathlessness may be considered the most debilitating symptom. This is the first of two articles on chronic heart failure, and outlines the pathophysiology of the condition, its causes, assessment, and signs and symptoms. Part 2 will discuss the treatment and management of the condition, including pharmacological strategies, device implantation, lifestyle modification, cardiac rehabilitation and palliative care.
...
PMID:Chronic heart failure part 1: pathophysiology, signs and symptoms. 2809 39
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