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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In its simplest and most succinct definition,
heart failure
can be defined as an inability of the heart to meet the metabolic demands of the body. Despite the diverse etiologies of
heart failure
in the pediatric population, the presentation of
heart failure
represents a common constellation of symptoms, signs, and physical findings. In infants, an inability to maintain growth either secondary to decreased nutritional intake or an increased catabolic state is a hallmark of
heart failure
. Infants exhibit increased sympathetic tone with excessive diaphoresis and increased heart rate.
Physical findings
in the infants with congestive heart failure (CHF) include increased work of breathing, tachypnea and hepatomegaly. In older children, in contrast, new onset
heart failure
may be less overtly symptomatic. Malaise, decrease in the level of daily activity, and weight loss may be present. Symptoms of abdominal pain and nausea and anorexia can be present and sometimes divert attention from the real etiology.
Physical findings
include rales and peripheral edema. If there is hepatomegaly, there will likely be hepatic tenderness as well. A gallop rhythm and tachycardia are commonly present. The long-term treatment of CHF in children includes digoxin, diuretics and afterload reduction with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. Digoxin decreases sympathetic tone and improves growth in infants. Diuretics should be used to relieve symptoms but may not be necessary in all children. ACE inhibitors are increasingly valuable in maintaining cardiac function long term. New uses of medications include the addition of spironalactone (Aldactone, G. D. Searle & Co., Chicago, IL) which, in adults, has been shown to significantly decrease both the death rate from CHF and the need for hospitalization. Beta-Blockers have been used in children in limited studies and may have a role in the treatment of patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. Surgical treatment, such as partial vectriculectomy, has shown short-term benefit and has been used sparingly in infants.
...
PMID:Treatment of heart failure in infants and children. 1172 82
Clinically unrecognized intravascular volume overload may contribute to worsening symptoms and disease progression in patients with chronic
heart failure
(CHF). The present study was undertaken to prospectively compare measured blood volume status (determined by radiolabeled albumin technique) with clinical and hemodynamic characteristics and patient outcomes in 43 nonedematous ambulatory patients with CHF. Blood volume analysis demonstrated that 2 subjects (5%) were hypovolemic (mean deviation from normal values -20 +/- 6%), 13 subjects (30%) were normovolemic (mean deviation from normal values -1 +/- 1%), and 28 subjects (65%) were hypervolemic (mean deviation from normal values +30 +/- 3%).
Physical findings
of congestion were infrequent and not associated with blood volume status. Increased blood volume was associated with increased pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (p = 0.01) and greatly increased risk of death or urgent cardiac transplantation during a median follow-up of 719 days (1-year event rate 39% vs 0%, p <0.01 by log-rank test). Systolic blood pressure was significantly lower in hypervolemic patients than in those with normovolemia or hypovolemia (107 +/- 2 vs 119 +/- 2 mm Hg, p = 0.008), and hypotension was independently associated with increased risk of hypervolemia in multivariate analysis (odds ratio 2.64 for a 10-mm Hg decrease in systolic blood pressure, 95% confidence interval 1.13 to 6.19, p = 0.025). These findings demonstrate that clinically unrecognized hypervolemia is frequently present in nonedematous patients with CHF and is associated with increased cardiac filling pressures and worse patient outcomes.
...
PMID:Relation of unrecognized hypervolemia in chronic heart failure to clinical status, hemodynamics, and patient outcomes. 1513 99
THREE PRINCIPLE REASONS:Confirming the existence of
heart failure
in an elderly patient is difficult because of the intricacy of the symptomatology with that of other diseases, the lesser willingness of the practitioner to diagnose it, and the limited access to explorations such as echocardiography. RELATIVELY UNSPECIFIC CLINICAL
SIGNS
:Dyspnoea, signs of low heart rate, peripheral oedema, crepitations or tachycardia are all inconstant signs or difficult to interpret. The response to a therapeutic test with diuretics is very useful. REGARDING SUPPLEMENTARY EXAMINATIONS: An echocardiography should be systematically performed in elderly patients in order to specify the type of
heart failure
and the extent of an eventually curable valvulopathy. Validation of the measurement of brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) in elderly patients is in progress.
...
PMID:[The difficulty in diagnosing heart failure in the elderly]. 1552 61