Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It has recently been recognized that many patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) are anemic. The anemia is very often associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD). The more severe the anemia the more severe the CHF, with higher mortality, morbidity, and hospitalization rate. The only way to prove that the anemia is itself a causative factor in the progression of both the CKD and the CHF is to correct it. In this paper we review the results of published papers and some preliminary reports about correction of this anemia in CHF. These studies frequently showed that erythropoietic stimulating agents (ESA) with oral or IV iron often resulted in improvement in left ventricular systolic and diastolic function, dilation, and hypertrophy, stabilization or improvement in renal function, reduced hospitalizations, diuretic dose, mitral regurgitation, pulmonary artery pressure, plasma volume, heart rate, serum brain natriuretic peptide levels, and the inflammatory markers C reactive protein and Interleukin 6, and an improvement in New York Heart Association class, exercise capacity, oxygen utilization during exercise, sleep apnea, caloric intake, depression, and quality of life. The activity of endothelial progenitor cells was also increased. Iron deficiency may also play an important role in the anemia, because significant improvement of cardiac, renal, and functional status in these anemic CKD-CHF has been seen after treatment with IV iron alone. Clearly more work is needed to clarify the relationship between anemia, CKD and CHF.
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PMID:The correction of anemia in patients with the combination of chronic kidney disease and congestive heart failure may prevent progression of both conditions. 1867 Jul 32

After more than a decade of relatively modest advancements, heart failure therapeutic development has accelerated, with the PARADIGM-HF trial and the SHIFT trial demonstrated significant reductions in cardiovascular death and heart failure hospitalization for sacubitril-valsartan and in heart failure hospitalization alone for ivabradine. Several heart failure therapies have since received or stand on the verge of market approval and promise substantive advances in the treatment of chronic heart failure. Some of these improve clinical outcomes, whereas others improve functional or patient-reported outcomes. In light of these rapid advances in the care of adults living with chronic heart failure, in this review we seek to update the general practitioner on novel heart failure therapies. Specifically, we will review recent data on the implementation of sacubitril-valsartan, treatment of functional mitral regurgitation, sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 (SGLT-2) inhibitor therapy, agents for transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy, treatment of iron deficiency in heart failure, and the use of biomarkers or remote hemodynamic monitoring to guide heart failure therapy.
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PMID:Recent advances in the treatment of chronic heart failure. 3194 37