1 / 50

Congestive Cardiac Failure

Introduction to Heart Failure. Heart unable to provide adequate perfusion of peripheral organs to meet their metabolic requirementsCharacterized by:Reduction in cardiac outputIncreased TPRProgressing to congestive heart failure (CHF) is accompanied by peripheral and pulmonary edema. . Recent Ad

crevan
Download Presentation

Congestive Cardiac Failure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Congestive Cardiac Failure Dr. R. Senthil Kumar

    2. Introduction to Heart Failure Heart unable to provide adequate perfusion of peripheral organs to meet their metabolic requirements Characterized by: Reduction in cardiac output Increased TPR Progressing to congestive heart failure (CHF) is accompanied by peripheral and pulmonary edema.

    3. Recent Advances Vs Reality Major advances in recent years in management of patients with CHF In 2000 an estimated 4.7 million people in the United States had HF The median survival after initial diagnosis is 1.7 years for men and 3.2 years for women. Sudden cardiac death is common in patients with heart failure, contributing to 50% of all 287,000 deaths in the United States last year

    4. Acute Vs Chronic HF In a patient with acute heart failure, the short-term aim is stabilization by providing symptomatic treatment through intravenous interventions. Management of chronic heart failure is multifaceted, with the long-term aims of: relieving symptoms improving hemodynamics improving quality of life and decrease mortality.

    5. Cardiac Vs Noncardiac targets Conventional belief that the primary defect in HF is in the heart Reality is that HF involves many other processes and organs Research has shown that therapy directed at noncardiac targets are more valuable than cardiac targets

    6. Compensation in HF Heart failure is usually accompanied by an increase in: Sympathetic nervous system (SNS) Chronic up-regulation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and effects of aldosterone on heart, vessels, and kidneys. CHF should be viewed as a complex, interrelated sequence of events involving hemodynamic, and neurohormonal events.

    7. Compensation contd.. In a failing heart, the loss of contractile function leads to a decline in CO and a decrease in arterial BP. Baroreceptors sense the hemodynamic changes and initiate countermeasures to maintain support of the circulatory system. Activation of the SNS serves as a compensatory mechanism in response to the earlier This helps maintain adequate cardiac output by: Increasing myocardial contractility and heart rate (ß1-adrenergic receptors) Increasing vasomotor tone (a1-adrenergic receptors) to maintain systemic blood pressure

    8. Consequences of hyperadrenergic state Over the long term, this hyperadrenergic state leads to irreversible myocyte damage, cell death, and fibrosis. In addition, the augmentation in peripheral vasomotor tone increases LV afterload This places an added stress upon the left ventricle and an increase in myocardial O2 demand (ventricular remodeling). The frequency and severity of cardiac arrhythmias are enhanced in the failing heart

    9. Figure p.203 kat

    10. Pathophysiology CHF pathophysiology animation

    11. Therapeutic Overview Problem Reduced force of contraction Decreased cardiac output Increased total peripheral resistance Inadequate organ perfusion Development of edema Decreased exercise tolerance Ischemic heart disease Sudden death Ventricular remodeling and decreased function

    12. Goals and drug therapy Goals Alleviation of symptoms, improve quality of life Arrest ventricular remodeling Prevent sudden death Nondrug therapy Reduce cardiac work; rest, weight loss, low Na+ diet Drug therapy Chronic heart failure ACE-I, ß-blockers, ARB, aldosterone antagonists, digoxin, diuretics Acute heart failure Intravenous diuretics, inotropic agents, PDE inhibitors, vasodilator

    13. Signs and symptoms Tachycardia Decreased exercise tolerance & SOB Peripheral and pulmonary edema Cardiomegaly

    15. Diuretics Bottom line: they decrease fluid volumes Four Flavours: Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors Loop diuretics Thiazide diuretics K+-sparing

    16. Renin angiotensin system Baroreceptor mediated activation of the SNS leads to an increase in renin release and formation of angiotensin II Angiotensin II acts through AT1 and AT2 receptors (most of its actions occur through AT1 receptors) This causes vasoconstriction and stimulates aldosterone production RAS remains the most important target of chronic CHF therapy

    17. Effects of AT-II

    18. MOA ACE-Inhibitors and ARB animation Blockade of ACE Decreased AT-II Decreased aldosterone Decreased fluid retention Vasodilation Reduced preload and afterload Slows cardiac remodeling

    19. Advantages Improves symptoms significantly Improves exercise tolerance Slows progression of the disease Prolong survival in established cases

    20. ADR What are the ADR of ACEIs? Cough (why?) Postural hypotention (why?) Hyperkalemia (possible Drug interactions?) Contraindicated in pregnant women (1st trimester) Rare: angioedema

    21. Other Vasodilators: Mechanism 2: Direct smooth muscle relaxants Nitrates Venous dilators Reduce preload Eg: sodium nitropruside

    22. Inotropes Increase force of contraction All increase intracellular cardiac Ca++ concentration Eg: Digitalis (cardiac glycoside) Dobutamine (ß-adrenergic agonist) Amrinone (PDE inhibitor)

    23. Cardiac glycosides Digitalis Sourced from foxglove plant 1785, Dr. William Withering’s monograph on digitalis Has a profound effect on the cardiac contractility

    25. Pck Two drugs (digoxin, digitoxin) Well absorbed orally 10% of population have bacteria in the gut, which inactivate digoxin, needing an increased dose in such Beware of using antibiotics in such patients Digoxin has a very narrow ther. Margin

    26. Pck Taken orally Enters CNS (so what?) Renal clearance proportional to CC To be used with extreme caution in patients suffering from renal impairment

    27. MOA Regulation of cytosolic Ca metabolism: Reversibly combine with sodium-potassium ATPase of the cardiac cell membrane Results in inhibition of pump activity This leads to in intracellular Na conc. This favors Ca ions in the cell Ca levels result in increased systolic force of contraction

    28. Digoxin MOA

    29. Na/K ATPase inhibition

    30. Additional MOA Force of contraction resembles to that of the normal heart Improved circulation leads to reduced sympathetic activity This reduces PVR All this leads to reduction in HR Vagal tone is enhanced Finally myocardial O2 demand is reduced

    31. Electrophysiological effects on the heart

    32. Uses Severe LV systolic dysfunction Only after initiation of diuretics and vasodialtor therapy Management of patients with chronic atrial fibrillation Cannot arrest the progression of pathological changes causing heart failure, and does not prolong life in patients with CHF

    33. ADR Digitalis toxicity is one among most commonest encountered (why?) Therapeutic concentration- 0.5-1.5 ng/ml Often the first step is discontinuation of Rx Digoxin levels must be monitored closely

    34. Signs of digoxin toxicity CNS: Malaise, confusion, depression, vertigo, vision (abnormalities in color vision) GI: Anorexia, nausea, intestinal cramping, diarrhea Cardiovascular: Palpitations, syncope, arrhythmias, bradycardia, AV node block, tachycardia

    35. Factors increasing the possibility of digoxin toxicity Pharmacological and toxic effects are greater in hypokalemic patients. K+-depleting diuretics are a major contributing factor to digoxin toxicity.

    36. Management Arrhythmias may be converted to normal sinus rhythm by K+. when the plasma K+ conc. is low or within the normal range. When the plasma K+ conc. is high, antiarrhythmic drugs, such as lidocaine, procainamide, or propranolol, can be used. Severe toxicity treated with Digibind, an anti-digoxin antibody.

    37. A 96-year-old AAF was admitted from a nursing home with complaints of abdominal pain, N/V, dizziness, confusion and double vision for 5 days. She was discharged from the hospital just 4 days ago. Digoxin was started during that previous hospitalization for control of tachycardia in atrial fibrillation. One day prior to discharge, digoxin level was 1.8 mg/mL and digoxin dose was decreased to 125 mcg PO Q 48 hr. PMH Hypertension, atrial fibrillation, coronary artery disease, stroke, congestive heart failure. Medications Metoprolol, Digoxin, ASA, lisinopril, Lasix, Coumadin, Nexium What could it be???

    38. Dopamine Dopamine acts at a variety of receptors (dose dependant) Rapid elimination- can only be administered as a continuous infusion

    39. Dobutamine Stimulates beta-adrenergic receptors and produces a positive inotropic response Unlike the vasoconstriction seen with high doses of dopamine, dobutamine produces a mild vasodilatation

    40. MOA

    41. PDE inhibitors Inamrinone (amrinone) and Milrinone (bipyridines) Acts by inhibiting the enzyme Phosphodiesterase Thus lead to increase of intracellular concentrations of cAMP cAMP is responsible for the conversion of inactive protein kinase to active form Protein kinases are responsible for phosphorylation of Ca channels Thus causing increased Ca entry into the cell.

    42. MOA Increase myocardial contractility by increasing the Ca influx during AP Also have vasodilating effect Selective for PDE isoenzyme-3 (found in cardiac and smooth muscle)

    43. Current status Both are orally active Only available in parenteral forms Limited efficacy Clinical trials- increased mortality (oral) Still new drugs are under trial

    44. ADR Inamrinone: nausea, vomiting, arrhythmias, thrombocytopenia and liver enzyme changes Withdrawn in some countries Milrinone: arrhythmias, less likely to cause other ADR

    45. (BNP)-Niseritide Brain (B-type) natriuretic peptide (BNP) is secreted constitutively by ventricular myocytes in response to stretch BNP binds to receptors in the vasculature, kidney, and other organs, producing potent vasodilation with rapid onset and offset of action by increasing levels of cGMP Niseritide is recombinant human BNP approved for treatment of acute decompensated CHF.

    46. BNP contd.. It reduces systemic and pulmonary vascular resistances, causing an indirect increase in cardiac output and diuresis. Effective in HF because cause reduction in preload and afterload ADR- hypotension

    47. Beta blockers Overwhelming evidence to support the use of ß-blockers in CHF, however Mechanism involved remain unclear Part of their beneficial effects may derive from slowing of heart rate and decrease myocardial O2consumption. This would lessen the frequency of ischemic events and potential for development of a lethal arrhythmia.

    48. Beta blockers Suggested mechanisms also include reduced remodeling ß-Blockers may be beneficial through resensitization of the down-regulated receptor, improving myocardial contractility. Recent studies with bisoprolol, carvedilol and metoprolol showed a reduction in mortality in patients with these drugs CI in unstable cases

    49. Management of Chronic HF (combination of drugs) Limit physical activity Reduce weight Reduce water intake Control HT Na restriction Diuretics ACE-Is Digitalis (ther. margin, DI with quinidine) Beta blockers Vasodilators

    50. Management of acute HF Diuretics Vasodilators Inotropic drugs Life support Treating cause (surgery to correct valvular disorders)

More Related