Literature DB >> 12707484

Distance between patients' subjective perceptions and objectively evaluated disease severity in chronic heart failure.

Francesco Grigioni1, Samuela Carigi, Silvana Grandi, Luciano Potena, Fabio Coccolo, Letizia Bacchi-Reggiani, Gaia Magnani, Eliana Tossani, Anna Chiara Musuraca, Carlo Magelli, Angelo Branzi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a socially relevant condition carrying an adverse prognosis. Systematic analysis is needed of the relationship between quality of life (QoL) - what patients are most interested in - and objective parameters of CHF severity - which largely determines physicians' care.
METHODS: We prospectively investigated QoL, as ascertained by the Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire, alongside all the currently used objective clinical/instrumental (electrocardiographic, echocardiographic, hemodynamic and functional capacity) indicators of disease severity in 106 consecutive CHF patients.
RESULTS: Besides persistence of sinus rhythm (p = 0.007), the only objective parameters that correlated with QoL were NYHA class (p < 0.001) and distance covered during the six minutes walking test (p < 0.001) (two indications of patients' ability to attend to their daily needs). Presence of left bundle branch block was associated with a worse QoL only in patients with CHF due to ischemic heart disease (p = 0.032). All the other clinical/instrumental parameters showed no relation with QoL (p > 0.150 in all cases).
CONCLUSIONS: Objective indicators of disease severity, which largely determine physicians' care, appear to have little bearing on QoL, suggesting that current treatment for CHF fails to satisfy patients' perceived needs. The possibility of cost-effective nonpharmaceutical therapeutic protocols (e.g. psychological interventions) specifically designed to improve patients' QoL deserves investigation as a much needed new approach to the management of CHF. Copyright 2003 S. Karger AG, Basel

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12707484     DOI: 10.1159/000069734

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychother Psychosom        ISSN: 0033-3190            Impact factor:   17.659


  8 in total

1.  Examination of clinical and psychosocial determinants of exercise capacity change in cardiac rehabilitation.

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2.  Assessment of Quality of Life in Young Patients with Single Ventricle after the Fontan Operation.

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Review 3.  Disease-specific health-related quality of life questionnaires for heart failure: a systematic review with meta-analyses.

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4.  Psychometric properties of the Minnesota Living with Heart Failure--Brazilian version--in the elderly.

Authors:  Izabel C R S Saccomann; Fernanda A Cintra; Maria Cecília B J Gallani
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2007-05-30       Impact factor: 4.147

5.  Quality of life in patients with heart failure: ask the patients.

Authors:  Seongkum Heo; Terry A Lennie; Chizimuzo Okoli; Debra K Moser
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6.  Validation of a new simple scale to measure symptoms in heart failure from traditional Chinese medicine view: a cross-sectional questionnaire study.

Authors:  Tieh-Cheng Fu; Yi-Chung Lin; Ching-Mao Chang; Wei-Ling Chou; Pei-Hsun Yuan; Min-Hui Liu; Chao-Hung Wang; Juei-Chao Chen; Hen-Hong Chang; Tai-Long Pan
Journal:  BMC Complement Altern Med       Date:  2016-09-02       Impact factor: 3.659

7.  A Personalized and Interactive Web-Based Health Care Innovation to Advance the Quality of Life and Care of Patients With Heart Failure (ACQUIRE-HF): A Mixed Methods Feasibility Study.

Authors:  Susanne S Pedersen; Thomas Schmidt; Søren Jensen Skovbakke; Uffe Kock Wiil; Kenneth Egstrup; Kim G Smolderen; John A Spertus
Journal:  JMIR Res Protoc       Date:  2017-05-23

8.  Patient-reported health status prior to cardiac resynchronisation therapy identifies patients at risk for poor survival and prolonged hospital stays.

Authors:  H Versteeg; J Denollet; M Meine; S S Pedersen
Journal:  Neth Heart J       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 2.380

  8 in total

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