| Literature DB >> 27115418 |
Natalia Briceno1, Divaka Perera2.
Abstract
Ischaemic cardiomyopathy is an important cardiovascular condition that has differing pathophysiological substrates and clinical manifestations. Contemporary management involves the administration of heart failure pharmacotherapy and device therapy where indicated, which has good prognostic data to support it. Whilst the role of revascularisation is clear in those patients presenting with an acute coronary syndrome or angina, the role in those patients presenting either incidentally, with predominant heart failure symptoms, or in those presenting with acute heart failure with an associated elevated troponin is less well defined and lacks randomised outcome data to support its adoption. The aim of this review is therefore to discuss the challenges in the diagnosis of ischaemic cardiomyopathy with a review of the existing imaging modalities that can facilitate, and to revisit the variety of clinical presentations that can occur, with particular emphasis on the contemporary role of revascularisation in these cohorts of patients.Entities:
Keywords: Ischaemia; Ischaemic cardiomyopathy; Revascularisation; Viability
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27115418 PMCID: PMC4846708 DOI: 10.1007/s11886-016-0726-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cardiol Rep ISSN: 1523-3782 Impact factor: 2.931
Summary of existing international guidelines on revascularisation in patients with LV systolic dysfunction with predominant heart failure symptoms
| Society | Guideline | Year | Recommendation | Class | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AHA | CABG | 2011 | CABG to improve survival is reasonable in patients with mild to moderate LV systolic function (EF 35–50 %) and significant (≥75 % diameter stenosis) multi-vessel CAD or proximal LAD stenosis, where viable myocardium is present in the region of intended revascularisation | IIa | B |
| AHA | CABG | 2011 | CABG might be considered with the primary or sole intent of improving survival in patients with stable IHD with severe systolic dysfunction whether or not viable myocardium is present | IIb | B |
| AHA | Heart failure | 2013 | CABG should be considered in patients with ICM and operable coronary anatomy whether or not viable myocardium is present | IIb | B |
| ESC | Heart failure | 2012 | CABG is recommended for patients with angina and significant left main stem stenosis, who are otherwise suitable for surgery to reduce the risk of premature death | I | C |
| ESC | Heart failure | 2012 | PCI may be considered as an alternative to CABG in patients unsuitable for surgery | IIb | C |
| ESC | Myocardial revascularisation | 2014 | Revascularisation for prognosis in patients with 2- or 3-vessel coronary artery disease with stenosis >50 % and impaired LV function (EF <40 %) | I | A |
| ESC | Myocardial revascularisation | 2014 | CABG is recommended in left main stem stenosis in patients with severe LV dysfunction | I | C |