1 management of chronic heart failure (congestive cardiac failure)

54
1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

Upload: chester-hood

Post on 17-Jan-2018

237 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

3 Heart failure… It may be caused by disease of the myocardium itself (most commonly ischaemic heart disease), or by circulatory factors such as volume overload (e.g. leaky valves, or arteriovenous shunts caused by congenital defects) or pressure overload (e.g. stenosed-narrowed valves, arterial or pulmonary hypertension). Some of these underlying causes are surgically correctable, and in some either the underlying disease (e.g. hyperthyroidism;), or an aggravating factor such as anaemia or atrial fibrillation, is treatable with drugs.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

1

MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC

HEART FAILURE

(Congestive Cardiac Failure)

Page 2: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

2

Heart Failure:- Definition

• is an inability of the heart to maintain a cardiac output sufficient to meet the requirements of the metabolizing tissues despite a normal filling pressure.

• It may affect the left ventricle, right ventricle or both.

• It may result from impaired ejection of blood from the heart during systole or from impaired relaxation of the heart during diastole.

Page 3: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

3

Heart failure…• It may be caused by disease of the myocardium

itself (most commonly ischaemic heart disease), or by circulatory factors such as volume overload (e.g. leaky valves, or arteriovenous shunts caused by congenital defects) or pressure overload (e.g. stenosed-narrowed valves, arterial or pulmonary hypertension).

• Some of these underlying causes are surgically correctable, and in some either the underlying disease (e.g. hyperthyroidism;), or an aggravating factor such as anaemia or atrial fibrillation, is treatable with drugs.

Page 4: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

4

Aims of treatment:• Improve quality of life by:improving symptomsavoiding side effectspreventing major morbid events such as

myocardial infarction or strokedelay death

Page 5: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

5

Secondary aims of treatment:• improval cardiac performance• improve exercise capacity• reduce arrhythmiasis (ventricular &

supraventricular)• maintain renal function• prevent electrolyte disturbance

Page 6: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

6

Relevant pathophysiology:

• There is a poor relationship between symptoms and cardiac performance in chronic heart failure.

• Treatment that improves cardiac function does not necessarily improve symptoms or prognosis and many treatments that have only modest beneficial effects on cardiac function may have clear beneficial effects on symptoms and prognosis.

• In contrast, there may be a relationship between haemodynamics, symptoms and prognosis in patients with acute pulmonary oedema or cardiogenic shock.

Page 7: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

7

Cardiac performance is influenced by:

1) Preload2) Force of Cardiac contraction3) Myocardial compliance4) After load5) Neuro endocrine activation

Page 8: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

8

1) Preload:• This determines ventricular end-diastolic

pressure and volume. • In normal hearts an increased preload

leads to increased end-diastolic fibre length, which, in turn, causes increased force of contraction.

• In heart failure, this response is reduced or even reversed.

Page 9: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

9

2) Force of cardiac contraction:

• This is determined largely by the intrinsic strength and integrity of the muscle cells.

Force of contraction is decreased by:• ischaemic heart disease (myocardial infarction

or chronic severe ischaemia).• Specific disorders affecting heart muscle e.g.

hypertension and myocarditis.• Disorders of heart muscle of unknown cause

e.g. idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy.

Page 10: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

10

3) Myocardial compliance:• This is an important determinant of

ventricular filling and therefore of CO.Compliance is decreased by:• Fibrosis• Hypertrophy• Ischaemia

Page 11: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

11

4) Afterload:

• This is the ventricular wall tension developed during ejection.

Afterload is increased by:• systemic arterial vasoconstriction• increased arterial pressure• obstruction to outflow e.g. aortic stenosis

Page 12: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

12

5) Neuro endocrine activation:

• After an acute cardiac insult plasma concentrations of renin, angiotension II, aldosterone, noradrenaline, endothelin, ADH (arginine vasopressin) and the natriuretic peptides are increased.

• If the patient survives and does not require treatment, then the activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) return to normal, probably a consequence of compensatory salt and water retention, but plasma concentrations of other neuroendocrine systems remain elevated.

Page 13: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

13

5) Neuro endocrine activation:...

• Once diuretics have been administered, RAAS activity increases, as do the concentrations of other neuro-hormones with the exception of the natriuretic peptides, which may decline.

• However, as the heart failure progresses, all the above neuroendocrine system becomes markedly activated.

Page 14: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

14

5) Neuro endocrine activation:...

• Increased sympathetic activation via arterial baroreflexes (and possibly a down-regulation of inhibitory activity of baroreceptors leads to sympathetically mediated increases in renal renin secretion and further increases in angiotensin II and aldosterone.

Page 15: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

15

5) Neuro endocrine activation:...

• Neuroendocrine activation may be responsible for many of the characteristics features of heart failure. Examples include:

• Angiotensin II: Vasoconstriction (esp renal) sodium retention, continuing cardiac myocyte damage causing progressive ventricular dilatation (remodelling); stimulates aldosterone secretion.

Page 16: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

16

5) Neuro endocrine activation:...

• Aldosterone: Sodium retention; potassium loss and myocardial fibrosis (both may lead to arrhythmias).

• Sympathetic activation: Vasoconstriction, arrhythmias, hypokalaemia

sodium retention. May initially increase cardiac contractility but has adverse effects on long-term cardiac function as for angiotensin II by progressive remodelling following myocardial damage.

Page 17: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

17

5) Neuro endocrine activation:...

• In the mestermined countries heart failure is caused by one of the following:

ischaemic heart diseaseHypertensionheart muscle disordersvalvular heart disease

Page 18: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

18

Drugs used to treat heart failure:

1) Diuretics: thiazides, loop diuretics• decrease peripheral and pulmonary oedema• decrease preload by reduction in circulatory volume.2) Neuroendocrine antagonists:• ACE inhibitors• β-receptor antagonists• ARBs• Aldosterone antagonists3) Drugs with positive inotropic effect; • cardiac glycosides (mainly chronic heart failure)• β-adrenoceptor agonists (acute heart failure only)4) Vasodilator agents:• Mainly decrease preload: nitrates (glyceryl trinitrate, isorbide dinitrate and

isosorbide mononitrate).• Mainly decrease afterload: hydralazine• Decrease preload and afterload: sodium nitroprusside (acute HF only).

Page 19: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

19

STEPS IN THE TREATMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE

Reduce workload of the heart(a) Limit activity level(b) Reduce weight.(c) Control hypertension.

Page 20: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

20

• Restrict sodium.• Restrict water (rarely required).• Give diuretics.• Give ACE inhibitors or angiotensin

receptor blocker.

Page 21: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

21

• Give digitalis if systolic dysfunction with third heart sound or atrial fibrillation is present.

• Give beta blockers to patients with stable class II -IV heart failure.

• Give vasodilators.

Page 22: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

22

SODIUM REMOVAL

• Sodium removal is important step----by dietary salt restriction or diuretic….especially if oedema is present.

• In mild failure, it is reasonable to start with a thiazide diuretic, switching to more powerful agents as required.

• Sodium loss causes secondary loss of potassium, which is particularly hazardous if the patient is to be given digitalis.

Page 23: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

23

• Hypokalaemia can be treated with potassium supplementation or through the addition of a potassium sparing-diuretic such as spironolactone

Page 24: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

24

ACE INHIBITORS AND ANGIOTENSIN RECEPTOR BLOCKERS

• In patient with left ventricular dysfunction but no oedema, ACE inhibitors should be used first.

• Several large studies have compared ACE inhibitors with other traditional therapies for chronic heart failure.

• The results show clearly that ACE inhibitors are superior to both placebo and to vasodilators and must be considered, along with diuretics, as first-line therapy for chronic failure.

Page 25: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

25

• However, ACE inhibitors cannot replace digoxin in patients already receiving that drug because patients withdrawn from the cardiac glycoside while on ACE inhibitors therapy deteriorate.

Page 26: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

26

• Additional studies suggest that ACE inhibitors are also valuable in asymptomatic patients with ventricular dysfunction.

• By reducing pre-load and after-load, these drugs appear to slow the rate of ventricular dilatation and thus delay the onset of clinical heart failure.

• Thus, ACE inhibitors are beneficial in all subsets of patients, from those who are asymptomatic to those in severe chronic failure.

Page 27: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

27

• It appears that all ACE inhibitors tested to date have beneficial effects in patients with heart failure.

• Recent studies have documented beneficial effects with enalapril, captopril, lisinopril, quinapril and ramipril..

• The angiotensin II receptors antagonists (e.g. losartan, valsartan, etc) produce beneficial hemodynamic effects similar to those of the ACE inhibitors.

• However, large clinical trials suggest that the angiotensin receptors blockers should be used in patients who are intolerant of ACE inhibitors (usually because of cough).

Page 28: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

28

VASODILATORS • Vasodilators drugs can be divided into

selective arteriolar dilators, venous dilators, drugs with non-selective vasodilatory effects.

• For this purpose, the ACE inhibitors may be considered non-selective arteriolar and venous dilators.

• The choice of agents should be based on the patient’s signs and symptoms and haemodynamic measurements.

Page 29: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

29

• Thus, in patients with high filling pressures in whom the principal symptoms is dyspnoea, venous dilators such as long-acting nitrates will be most helpful in reducing filing pressure and the symptoms of pulmonary congestion.

• In patients whom fatigue due to low ventricular output is primary symptom, an arteriolar dilator such as hydralazine may be helpful in increasing forward cardiac output.

Page 30: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

30

• In most patients with severe chronic failure that responds poorly to other therapy, the problem usually involves both elevated filling pressures and reduced cardiac output.

• In these circumstances, dilation of both arterioles and veins is required. In one trial, combined therapy with hydralazine (arteriolar dilation) and isosorbide dinitrate (venous dilation) prolonged life more than placebo in patients already receiving digitalis and diuretics.

Page 31: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

31

BETA-BLOCKERS AND CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKERS

• Many trials have evaluated the potential for beta-blocker therapy in patients with heart failure. The rationale is based on the hypothesis that excessive tachycardia and adverse effects of high catecholamine levels on the heart failure patients contribute to the downward course of heart failure patients. However, such therapy must be initiated very cautiously at low doses, since acutely blocking the supportive effects of catecholamines can worsen heart failure.

Page 32: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

32

• Several months of therapy may be required before improvement is noted, this is usually consists of a slight rise in ejection fraction, slower heart rate, and reduction in symptoms. As noted above, bisoprolol, carvedilol, metoprolol have been shown to reduce mortality.

• The calcium-blocking drugs appear to have no role in the treatment of patients with heart failure. Their depressant effects on the heart may worsen heart failure.

Page 33: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

33

DIGITALIS

• Digoxin is indicated in patients with heart failure and atrial fibrillation. It is also most helpful in patients with a dilated heart and third heart sound.

• It usually given after ACE inhibitors.• Only about 50% of patients with normal

sinus rhythm have documented relief of heart failure from digitalis.

Page 34: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

34

• Because it has a moderate but persistent positive inotropic effect, digitalis can, in theory, reverse the signs and symptoms of heart failure. In appropriate patient, digitalis increases the stroke work and cardiac output.

• The increased output (and possibly a direct action resetting the sensitivity of baroceptors) eliminates the stimuli evoking increased sympathetic outflow, and both heart rate and vascular tone diminish.

Page 35: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

35

• With decreased end-diastolic fiber tension (the result of increased systolic ejection and decreased filling pressure), heart size and oxygen demand decrease.

• Finally, increased renal blood flow improves glomerular filtration and reduces aldosterone-driven sodium reabsorption. Thus, oedema fluid can be excreted, further reduction ventricular pre-load and danger of pulmonary oedema.

Page 36: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

36

• Digitalis reduces hospitalization and death from progressive heart failure at the expense of an increase in sudden death.

• It is important to note that the mortality rate was reduced in patients with serum digoxin concentration of 1ng/mL or less but increased in those with digoxin levels greater than 1.5ng/mL.

Page 37: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

37

CLINICAL USE OF DIGOXIN DIGOXIN

Therapeutic plasma concentration

0.5- 1.5 ng/mL

Toxic plasma concentration

> 2ng/mL

Daily dose (slow loading or maintenance)

0.25 (0.125-0.5) mg

Rapid digitalizing dose (rarely used)

0.5-0.75 mg every 8 hours for three doses

Page 38: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

38

• These values are appropriate for adults with normal renal and hepatic function.

Page 39: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

39

DRUGS WITH POSITIVE INOTROPIC EFFECTS

• Drugs that inhibit phosphodiesterases, the family of enzymes that inactivate cAMP and cGMP, have long been used in the therapy of heart failure.

• The bipyridines inamrinone and milrinone are the most successful of these agents found to date.

Page 40: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

40

• Levosimendan, an investigational drug that appears to inhibit phosphodiesterase and cause some vasodilatation in addition to its inotropic effects.

Page 41: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

41

BIPYRIDINES

• Inamrinone (previously called amrinone) and milrinone are bipyridine compounds that inhibit phosphodiesterase. They are active orally as well as parenterally but only available in parenteral forms.

• They have elimination half-lives of 3 to 6

hours, with 10 to 40% being excreted in the urine.

Page 42: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

42

PHARMACODYNAMICS

• The bipyridines increase myocardial contractility by increasing calcium influx in the heart during the action potential.

• They also important vasodilating effect.• These drugs are relatively selective for

phosphodiesterase isoenzyme 3, a form found in cardiac and smooth muscle.

Page 43: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

43

• Inhibition of this enzyme results in an increase in cAMP and increase in contractility and vasodilatation.

• The toxicity of inamrinone includes nausea and vomiting; arrhythmias, thrombocytopenia and liver enzyme changes.

Page 44: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

44

• Milrinone appears less likely to cause bone marrow and liver toxicity than inamrinone, but it does cause arrhythmias.

• Inamrinone and milrinone are now used only intravenously and only for acute heart failure or exacerbation of chronic heart failure.

Page 45: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

45

BETA ADRENOCEPTOR STIMULANTS

• The selective β1 agonist that has been most widely used in patients with heart failure is dobutamine.

• This drug produces an increase in cardiac output together with a decrease in ventricular filling pressure

• Some tachycardia and increase in myocardial oxygen consumption have been reported.

Page 46: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

46

• The potential for producing angina or arrhythmias in patients with coronary artery disease must be considered, as well as the tachyphylaxis that accompanies the use of any β stimulant.

• Dopamine has also been used in acute heart failure and be particularly helpful if there is need to raise blood pressure

Page 47: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

47

DIURETICS

• Their major mechanism of action in heart failure is to reduce venous pressure and ventricular pre-load.

• These reductions have two useful effects: reduction of oedema and its symptoms and reduction of cardiac size, which leads to improved pump efficiency.

Page 48: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

48

VASODILATORS

• The vasodilators are effective in acute heart failure because they provide a reduction in pre-load (through venodilation), or reduction in after load (through arterial dilatation), or both.

• Some evidence suggests that long-term use of hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate can also reduce damaging remodeling of the heart.

Page 49: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

49

• A synthetic form of endogenous peptide brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) has recently been approved for use in acute cardiac failure as nesiritide.

• This recombinant product increases cGMP in smooth muscle cells and effectively reduces venous and arteriolar tone in experimental preparations. It also causes diuresis.

Page 50: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

50

• The peptide has a short half-life of about 18 minutes and is administered as a bolus intravenous dose followed by continuous infusion.

• Excessive hypotension is the most common adverse effect.

Page 51: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

51

• Bosentan, an orally active competitive inhibitor of endothelin, has been shown to have some benefit in experimental animal models heart failure, but results in human trials have not been impressive.

• This drug is approved for use in pulmonary hypertension. It has significant teratogenic and hepatotoxic effects.

Page 52: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

52

BETA ADRENOCEPTOR BLOCKERS

• Most patients with chronic heart failure respond favorably to certain beta-blockers in spite of the fact that these drugs can precipitate acute decompensation of cardiac function.

• Studies with bisoprolol, carvedilol, metoprolol showed a reduction in mortality in patients with stable severe heart failure but this effect was not observed with another beta-blocker, bucindolol,

Page 53: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

53

• The full understanding of the beneficial action of beta blockade is lacking, but suggested mechanism include attenuation of the adverse effects of high concentration of catecholamines (including apoptosis), up-regulation of beta-receptors, decrease heart rate, and reduced remodeling through inhibition of mitogenic activity of catecholamines.

Page 54: 1 MANAGEMENT OF CHRONIC HEART FAILURE (Congestive Cardiac Failure)

54

• Read on:-• The General Principles of Management

of Heart Failure