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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chronic heart failure affects between 1-5% of the population and rise steeply with age. Most patients with chronic heart failure should be routinely managed with a combination of 4 types of drugs: a diuretic, an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACE-I), beta-blocker and usually digitalis. Diuretics are essential for symptomatic treatment when fluid overload is present, and should always be administrated in combination with ACE-I if possible. ACE-I improves survival and symptoms and reduces hospitalization in patients with moderate to severe ventricular systolic dysfunction, and in the absence of fluid retention should be given first. Angiotensin II receptor antagonist could be considered in patients who not tolerate ACE-I. beta-blocking agents are recommended for treatment of patients with stable, mild, moderate and severe heart failure unless there is a contraindication. Bisoprolol, metoprolol and carvedilol have been associated with reduction in total mortality, cardiovascular mortality and sudden death. Cardiac glycosides are indicated in atrial fibrillation and any degree of symptomatic heart failure in order slow ventricular rate. Indications for antiarrhythmic drug therapy include atrial fibrillation, non-sustained or sustained ventricular tachycardia. Oral anticoagulation reduces the risk of stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation, and there is a lack of evidence to support the use of antithrombotic therapy in patients in sinus rhythm.
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PMID:[Pharmacotherapy of chronic heart failure in clinical practice]. 1551 21

Chronic heart failure is characterized by changes in skeletal muscle that contribute to physical disability. Most studies to date have investigated defects in skeletal muscle oxidative capacity. In contrast, less is known about how heart failure affects myofibrillar protein metabolism. Thus we examined the effect of heart failure on skeletal muscle myofibrillar protein metabolism, with a specific emphasis on changes in myosin heavy chain (MHC) protein content, synthesis, and isoform distribution in 10 patients with heart failure (63 +/- 3 yr) and 11 controls (70 +/- 3 yr). In addition, we examined the relationship of MHC protein metabolism to inflammatory markers and physical function. Although MHC and actin protein content did not differ between groups, MHC protein content decreased with increasing disease severity in heart failure patients (r = -0.748, P < 0.02), whereas actin protein content was not related to disease severity. No difference in MHC protein synthesis was found between groups, and MHC protein synthesis rates were not related to disease severity. There were, however, relationships between C-reactive protein and both MHC protein synthesis (r = -0.442, P = 0.05) and the ratio of MHC to mixed muscle protein synthesis (r = -0.493, P < 0.03). Heart failure patients showed reduced relative amounts of MHC I (P < 0.05) and a trend toward increased MHC IIx (P = 0.06). In regression analyses, decreased MHC protein content was related to decreased exercise capacity and muscle strength in heart failure patients. Our results demonstrate that heart failure affects both the quantity and isoform distribution of skeletal muscle MHC protein. The fact that MHC protein content was related to both exercise capacity and muscle strength further suggests that quantitative alterations in MHC protein may have functional significance.
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PMID:Skeletal muscle myofibrillar protein metabolism in heart failure: relationship to immune activation and functional capacity. 1556 48

Recently two monodisciplinary guidelines, 'Mood disorders' and 'Chronic heart failure', were upgraded to multidisciplinary guidelines in order to guarantee an appropriate long-term care trajectory for these patients. Neither guideline mentions clinically relevant interactions despite the extensive research in this area over the past decade. The guideline for chronic heart failure should include information on how to detect patients who are depressed or at risk of depression and that depressed patients are at risk of non-compliance with the cardiac treatment. In the guideline for mood disorders excess mortality and the need for combined treatment with cardiologists should be mentioned.
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PMID:[Chronic heart failure and depression: the limitations of specialization-specific multidisciplinary guidelines]. 1575 11

Chronic heart failure is characterized by increased renal extraction of endothelin (ET)-1 and unaltered handling of big ET-1. The renal extraction of ET-1 in patients with heart failure is closely related to elevations in pulmonary artery and pulmonary capillary wedge pressures.
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PMID:Renal handling of endothelin in patients with chronic heart failure. 1569 48

Chronic heart failure is an important health problem associated with a high mortality and morbidity. Appropriate treatment reduces mortality and leads to improved exercise tolerance but many patients report poor quality of sleep. Sleep studies of patients with heart failure suggest that sleep disordered breathing is experienced in 50% of patients and is a powerful predictor of poor prognosis. Sleep disordered breathing broadly comprises obstructive sleep apnoea, when upper airway instability causes mechanical obstruction to breathing; and central sleep apnoea, characterised by an absence of ventilatory effort. Sleep disordered breathing occurring in patients with heart failure is in most part attributable to central sleep apnoea and reflects uncompensated instability of the ventilatory feedback mechanism.
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PMID:Impact of heart failure on quality of sleep. 1570 41

Paradigms in understanding heart failure have changed as the knowledge of pathophysiology and its molecular basis has deepened. In the chronic compensated state of heart failure recent research has focussed on the body's regulatory mechanisms. Today heart failure is understood as a complex interplay of hemodynamic and neurohormonal factors. In pediatrics a large variety of heterogeneous conditions cause heart failure. Some require special therapeutic approaches such as the infusion of prostaglandin for ductal patency, the careful maintenance of balance between systemic and pulmonary circulations or operative treatment. In newborns with critical congenital lesions and in patients in the postoperative period management of acute heart failure becomes important. Chronic heart failure as it is understood today is present in patients with cardiomyopathies and in an increasing number of pediatric patients after palliative surgery. In heart failure due to left-to-right shunts a similar activation of compensatory neurohormonal mechanisms as in adults with chronic heart failure was found. In small clinical trials treatment of these activated compensatory mechanisms with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and beta-blockers showed beneficial effects in pediatric patients. However large clinical multicenter trials as performed in the adult population should be conducted.
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PMID:Heart failure in pediatric patients. 1570 35

Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a common condition and is associated with excess morbidity and mortality, in spite of the many advances in its treatment. Chronic stable heart failure is also associated with an increased incidence of sleep-related breathing disorders, such as central sleep apnoea (CSA) and Cheyne Stokes respiration (CSR). Continuous positive airways pressure (CPAP) has been shown to alleviate the symptoms of CHF, improve left ventricular function and oxygenation. To a certain extent, CPAP also abolishes sleep-related breathing disorders in patients with chronic heart failure. In patients with acute pulmonary oedema, the use of positive pressure ventilation improves cardiac haemodynamic indices, as well as symptoms and oxygenation, and is associated with a lower need for intubation. However, some studies have cast doubts about its safety and suggest a higher rate of myocardial infarction associated with its use. In our opinion, non-invasive positive pressure ventilation and CPAP offers an adjunctive mode of therapy in patients with acute pulmonary oedema and chronic heart failure, who may not be suitable for intubation and in those not responsive to conventional therapies. Non-invasive ventilation also helps to improve oxygenation in those patients with exhaustion and respiratory acidosis. Many trials are still ongoing and the results of these studies would throw more light on the present role of non-invasive ventilation in the management of CHF.
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PMID:Positive pressure ventilation in the management of acute and chronic cardiac failure: a systematic review and meta-analysis. 1638 32

Chronic heart failure is responsible for considerable suffering and mortality throughout the world. Clinical trials have consistently demonstrated the benefits of pharmacological therapies such as angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and beta-adrenoceptor blockers. These drugs are often quoted as reducing mortality from heart failure, yet all patients with heart failure deteriorate and most will die because of their disease. Therapies in heart failure are not truly life saving; they modify the natural history of the disease and delay the time to deterioration. The time benefit in survival is not usually reported in clinical trials, which are conducted over fixed time points and report risk reductions during this period only. In this paper, we discuss the use of prolongation of life statistics as an outcome measure in clinical trials and review simple techniques for calculating the lifetime benefit of pharmacological intervention in heart failure using data from a number of major studies
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PMID:Life-saving or life-prolonging? Interpreting trial data and survival curves for patients with congestive heart failure. 1576 9

There have been many articles, reviews and editorials about the recent advances in pharmaceutical and device management of chronic heart failure in this and other journals over the last few years. What has been less praised are the significant advances we have made in understanding the best management of heart failure using other non-drug, non-surgical, non-device approaches. Approaches as diverse as nutrition, education, exercise, physiotherapy, psychotherapy and therapies for sleep-disordered breathing have shown considerable promise in improving the lot of our chronic heart failure (CHF) patients. Chronic heart failure is a common condition with a poor prognosis. It generates many debilitating symptoms for the sufferer. Non-pharmacologic treatment modalities play an important role alongside effective modern pharmaceutical, surgical and device therapies in relieving symptoms and improving prognosis. These treatments include those lifestyle measures that reduce the risk of underlying diseases such as coronary artery disease, diabetes, and hypertension lifestyle interventions of benefit in established CHF. Recent advances are reviewed including specialist nursing care, multi-disciplinary heart failure clinics, exercise rehabilitation, the treatment of sleep-disordered breathing, depression, obesity and cachexia. The day of the multi-disciplinary patient-centred CHF clinic has arrived and all sufferers deserve experienced management using all these approaches.
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PMID:Advances in the non-drug, non-surgical, non-device management of chronic heart failure. 1672 90

Despite the decreasing incidence of ischaemic heart disease and despite major medical advances in heart failure, the prevalence and mortality of chronic heart failure in the population is rising and the prognosis remains grim. Chronic heart failure is a complex disease, which is characterized by its progressive nature. In this paper, we approach the complexity of heart failure from four paradoxes: epidemiology, diagnosis, therapy and economical impact respectively. Taking these paradoxes into account, we formulate a number of essential components of alternative heart failure management programmes. Combating chronic heart failure requires the organization of centres for continuous care--as opposed to the traditional crisis intervention centres--preferably with a multidisciplinary structure to provide a "holistic approach" adapted to each patient's unique set of medical, psychosocial, physical and financial conditions. Patients taken care of in these novel multidisciplinary heart failure clinics have shown improved clinical status, decreased hospitalization rates, increased quality of life, longer life and lower costs.
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PMID:Urgent need to reorganize heart failure management: from paradoxes to heart failure clinics. 1588 74


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