Acute heart failure: Difference between revisions
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See also [[Chronic heart failure]] for non-critical care management |
See also [[Chronic heart failure]] for non-critical care management |
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== |
==Background== |
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== |
===Etiologies=== |
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*[[Acute coronary syndrome]] |
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* Electrical |
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*Mechanical complications of myocardial infarction |
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** Atrial fibrillation |
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*Acute valvular regurgitation |
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** Complete heart block |
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*Hypertension |
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* Myocardial |
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*Arrhythmia including atrial fibrillation |
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** Coronary artery disease |
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*Peripartum cardiomyopathy |
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** Ventricular hypertrophy |
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*Complications of cardiac surgery |
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** Cardiomyopathy |
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*Infection: [[myocarditis]], [[infective endocarditis]] |
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* Valves |
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*Endocrinopathy |
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** Mitral valve disease |
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*High-output heart failure: sepsis or severe infection, thyroid storm, anemia, arteriovenouss fistula, Paget disease |
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** Aortic valve disease |
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*Medication non-adherence |
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* Pericardium |
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** Cardiac tamponade |
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* Large vessels |
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** Aortic dissection |
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** Severe hypertension |
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** Pulmonary hypertension |
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== |
===Stages=== |
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#Increased filling pressures (i.e. pulmonary artery wedge pressure) |
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* Reduced ejection fraction |
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#Decreased stroke volume and increased heart rate, maintaining cardiac output |
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* Preserved ejection fraction |
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#Further increase in filling pressure and decreased cardiac output (decompensation) |
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** Ventricular hypertrophy |
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** Myocardial ischemia |
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** Restrictive or fibrotic cardiomyopathy |
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** Pericardial tamponade |
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** Positive pressure ventilation including PEEP |
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* Right-sided failure |
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** Pulmonary hypertension from any cause, most commonly chronic lung diseases and pulmonary embolism |
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** Inferior wall MI |
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== |
== Clinical Manifestations == |
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* Hypoperfusion, with fatigue, weakness, confusion, and pale, cool, and moist extremities |
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# Increased filling pressures (i.e. pulmonary artery wedge pressure) |
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* Circulatory congestion |
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# Decreased stroke volume and increased heart rate, maintaining cardiac output |
|||
** RV failure: peripheral edema, JV distension, epigastric tenderness from hepatomegaly, pleural or pericardial effusions |
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# Further increase in filling pressure and decreased cardiac output (decompensation) |
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** LV failure: pulmonary edema with dyspnea, tachypnea, orthopnea, and crackles on auscultation |
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* Common symptoms include progressive exertional dyspnea, orthopnea, and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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== Examination == |
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! |
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!Normal Perfusion |
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!Hypoperfusion |
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|- |
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|Pulmonary congestion |
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|warm and wet |
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|cold and wet |
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|- |
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|No pulmonary congestion |
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|warm and dry |
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|cold and dry |
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|} |
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===Rational Clinical Examination=== |
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* History of CHF (LR+ 5.8, LR- 0.45) |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" |
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* PND (LR+ 2.6) |
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!Sign or Symptom |
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* S3 on auscultation (LR+ 11) |
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!LR+ |
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* CXR showing congestion (LR+ 12) |
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!LR– |
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* Atrial fibrillation (LR+ 3.8) |
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|- |
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* No dyspnea on exertion (LR- 0.48) |
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|CXR showing congestion |
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* No cardiomegaly on CXR (LR- 0.33) |
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|12 |
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* Low/normal BNP (LR- 0.11) |
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| |
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|- |
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|S3 on auscultation |
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|11 |
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| |
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|- |
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|History of heart failure |
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|5.8 |
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|0.45 |
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|- |
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|Atrial fibrillation |
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|3.8 |
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| |
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|- |
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|Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea |
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|2.6 |
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| |
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|- |
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|No dyspnea on exertion |
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| |
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|0.48 |
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|- |
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|No cardiomegaly on CXR |
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| |
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|0.33 |
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|- |
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|Low or normal BNP |
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| |
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|0.11 |
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|} |
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== |
== Investigations == |
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* ECG to assess for [[myocardial infarction]], [[arrhythmia]], and [[conduction abnormalities]] |
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* Left-sided heart failure |
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* Chest x-ray for evidence of pulmonary congestion, pleural effusion, or cardiomegaly |
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** High BP |
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* Echocardiography |
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*** Vasodilators with nitroglycerine, nitroprusside, or nesiritide |
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* Laboratory tests |
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*** Diuretic therapy with furosemide for volume overload |
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** Routine, including CBC, creatinine, electrolytes, liver enzymes, ± ABG |
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** Normal BP |
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** Cardiac-specific, including troponin and BNP/NT-proBNP |
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*** Vasodilator therapy if tolerated |
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*** Alternately, inodilator therapy with [[../Pharmacology/Dobutamine.md|Dobutamine]], [[../Pharmacology/Milrinone.md|Milrinone]], or levosimendan |
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==Management== |
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*** Diuretic therapy with furosemide for volume overload |
|||
** Low BP |
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*Treat underlying condition and acute precipitant |
|||
*** Inodilator therapy with [[../Pharmacology/Dobutamine.md|Dobutamine]] |
|||
*Continue home β-blocker and ACEi/ARB unless hypotensive or bradycardic |
|||
*** Alternately, vasoconstrictor therapy with dopamine |
|||
*Left-sided heart failure is managed primarily with vasodilators, loop diuretics, and mechanical ventilation |
|||
*** Mechanical cardiac support |
|||
**High BP |
|||
** Start ACEi 24-48h into admission, if BP and renal function allow, followed by beta blocker (if tolerated) |
|||
***Vasodilators with [[nitroglycerine]], [[nitroprusside]], or [[nesiritide]] |
|||
* Education |
|||
***Diuretic therapy with [[furosemide]] for volume overload |
|||
** Low-salt diet |
|||
**Normal BP |
|||
** Daily weights, and logging |
|||
***Vasodilator therapy if tolerated (avoid if SBP less than 110 mmHg) |
|||
** Alert CHF clinic if dizzy or gained/lost 3lbs |
|||
***Alternately, inodilator therapy with [[dobutamine]], [[milrinone]], or [[levosimendan]] |
|||
***Diuretic therapy with [[furosemide]] for volume overload |
|||
**Low BP |
|||
***Inodilator therapy with [[dobutamine]] |
|||
***Alternately, vasoconstrictor therapy with [[dopamine]] |
|||
***Mechanical cardiac support |
|||
**Start [[ACEi]] 24-48h into admission, if BP and renal function allow, followed by [[β-blocker]] (if tolerated) |
|||
*Isolated right-sided heart failure |
|||
**Avoid vasodilators (including ACEi/ARBs) and diuretics |
|||
**May need careful fluid administration to improve cardiac output |
|||
**Occasionally need [[dopamine]] |
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=== Vasodilators === |
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* [[Nitroglycerin]] 10 to 20 mcg/min IV, increased by 5 to 10 mcg/min every 3 to 5 minutes as tolerated by SBP |
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** Maximum 200 mcg/min |
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** Alternately, can be given translingually 400 mcg every 5 to 10 minutes (usually the dose of 1 spray) |
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** Used for short period of time because tolerance develops within 24 to 48 hours |
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* [[Sodium nitroprusside]] 0.3 mcg/kg/min IV, increased up to maximum of 5 mcg/kg/min |
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** Preferred in [[hypertension]] or [[mitral regurgitation]] |
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** Avoid in [[acute coronary syndrome]] (may cause coronary steal effect) |
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** Can cause [[cyanide toxicity]] |
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* Avoid starting new ACEi/ARB in the acute setting, but they should be started before discharge if no contraindication |
|||
=== Diuretic Therapy === |
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* [[Furosemide]] |
|||
** Moderate volume overload: 20 to 40 mg daily PO or IV |
|||
** Severe volume overload: 40 to 100 mg IV, or continuous infusion of 5 to 40 mg/h |
|||
* If inadequate response, can add [[hydrochlorothiazide]] 50 to 100 mg PO daily or [[spironolactone]] 25 to 50 mg daily |
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* If inadequate response, consider [[dobutamine]], [[dopamine]], or dialysis |
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* Once stable, consider aldosterone antagonist (e.g. spironolactone) if LVEF ≤40% and no contraindications |
|||
=== β-Blockers === |
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* Continue home β-blockers if no contraindications (e.g. hypotension or bradycardia) |
|||
* If no home β-blockers, add once stable |
|||
=== Supportive Treatment === |
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* Consider noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation in patients with SpO2 <90% despite supplemental oxygen |
|||
** CPAP |
|||
* May need ECMO as bridge therapy |
|||
=== Education === |
|||
*Low-salt diet |
|||
*Daily weights, and logging |
|||
*Alert CHF clinic if dizzy or gained/lost 3lbs |
|||
[[Category:Cardiology]] |
[[Category:Cardiology]] |
Revision as of 01:50, 22 February 2021
See also Chronic heart failure for non-critical care management
Background
Etiologies
- Acute coronary syndrome
- Mechanical complications of myocardial infarction
- Acute valvular regurgitation
- Hypertension
- Arrhythmia including atrial fibrillation
- Peripartum cardiomyopathy
- Complications of cardiac surgery
- Infection: myocarditis, infective endocarditis
- Endocrinopathy
- High-output heart failure: sepsis or severe infection, thyroid storm, anemia, arteriovenouss fistula, Paget disease
- Medication non-adherence
Stages
- Increased filling pressures (i.e. pulmonary artery wedge pressure)
- Decreased stroke volume and increased heart rate, maintaining cardiac output
- Further increase in filling pressure and decreased cardiac output (decompensation)
Clinical Manifestations
- Hypoperfusion, with fatigue, weakness, confusion, and pale, cool, and moist extremities
- Circulatory congestion
- RV failure: peripheral edema, JV distension, epigastric tenderness from hepatomegaly, pleural or pericardial effusions
- LV failure: pulmonary edema with dyspnea, tachypnea, orthopnea, and crackles on auscultation
- Common symptoms include progressive exertional dyspnea, orthopnea, and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea
Normal Perfusion | Hypoperfusion | |
---|---|---|
Pulmonary congestion | warm and wet | cold and wet |
No pulmonary congestion | warm and dry | cold and dry |
Rational Clinical Examination
Sign or Symptom | LR+ | LR– |
---|---|---|
CXR showing congestion | 12 | |
S3 on auscultation | 11 | |
History of heart failure | 5.8 | 0.45 |
Atrial fibrillation | 3.8 | |
Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea | 2.6 | |
No dyspnea on exertion | 0.48 | |
No cardiomegaly on CXR | 0.33 | |
Low or normal BNP | 0.11 |
Investigations
- ECG to assess for myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, and conduction abnormalities
- Chest x-ray for evidence of pulmonary congestion, pleural effusion, or cardiomegaly
- Echocardiography
- Laboratory tests
- Routine, including CBC, creatinine, electrolytes, liver enzymes, ± ABG
- Cardiac-specific, including troponin and BNP/NT-proBNP
Management
- Treat underlying condition and acute precipitant
- Continue home β-blocker and ACEi/ARB unless hypotensive or bradycardic
- Left-sided heart failure is managed primarily with vasodilators, loop diuretics, and mechanical ventilation
- High BP
- Vasodilators with nitroglycerine, nitroprusside, or nesiritide
- Diuretic therapy with furosemide for volume overload
- Normal BP
- Vasodilator therapy if tolerated (avoid if SBP less than 110 mmHg)
- Alternately, inodilator therapy with dobutamine, milrinone, or levosimendan
- Diuretic therapy with furosemide for volume overload
- Low BP
- Inodilator therapy with dobutamine
- Alternately, vasoconstrictor therapy with dopamine
- Mechanical cardiac support
- Start ACEi 24-48h into admission, if BP and renal function allow, followed by β-blocker (if tolerated)
- High BP
- Isolated right-sided heart failure
- Avoid vasodilators (including ACEi/ARBs) and diuretics
- May need careful fluid administration to improve cardiac output
- Occasionally need dopamine
Vasodilators
- Nitroglycerin 10 to 20 mcg/min IV, increased by 5 to 10 mcg/min every 3 to 5 minutes as tolerated by SBP
- Maximum 200 mcg/min
- Alternately, can be given translingually 400 mcg every 5 to 10 minutes (usually the dose of 1 spray)
- Used for short period of time because tolerance develops within 24 to 48 hours
- Sodium nitroprusside 0.3 mcg/kg/min IV, increased up to maximum of 5 mcg/kg/min
- Preferred in hypertension or mitral regurgitation
- Avoid in acute coronary syndrome (may cause coronary steal effect)
- Can cause cyanide toxicity
- Avoid starting new ACEi/ARB in the acute setting, but they should be started before discharge if no contraindication
Diuretic Therapy
- Furosemide
- Moderate volume overload: 20 to 40 mg daily PO or IV
- Severe volume overload: 40 to 100 mg IV, or continuous infusion of 5 to 40 mg/h
- If inadequate response, can add hydrochlorothiazide 50 to 100 mg PO daily or spironolactone 25 to 50 mg daily
- If inadequate response, consider dobutamine, dopamine, or dialysis
- Once stable, consider aldosterone antagonist (e.g. spironolactone) if LVEF ≤40% and no contraindications
β-Blockers
- Continue home β-blockers if no contraindications (e.g. hypotension or bradycardia)
- If no home β-blockers, add once stable
Supportive Treatment
- Consider noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation in patients with SpO2 <90% despite supplemental oxygen
- CPAP
- May need ECMO as bridge therapy
Education
- Low-salt diet
- Daily weights, and logging
- Alert CHF clinic if dizzy or gained/lost 3lbs