| Literature DB >> 29280256 |
Wolfram Doehner1,2,3, Dilek Ural4, Karl Georg Haeusler1,5, Jelena Čelutkienė6, Reinaldo Bestetti7, Yuksel Cavusoglu8, Marco A Peña-Duque9, Duska Glavas10, Massimo Iacoviello11, Ulrich Laufs12, Ricardo Marmol Alvear13, Amam Mbakwem14, Massimo F Piepoli15, Stuart D Rosen16, Georgios Tsivgoulis17, Cristiana Vitale18, M Birhan Yilmaz19, Stefan D Anker2,3,20, Gerasimos Filippatos21, Petar Seferovic22, Andrew J S Coats23, Frank Ruschitzka24.
Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is a complex clinical syndrome with multiple interactions between the failing myocardium and cerebral (dys-)functions. Bi-directional feedback interactions between the heart and the brain are inherent in the pathophysiology of HF: (i) the impaired cardiac function affects cerebral structure and functional capacity, and (ii) neuronal signals impact on the cardiovascular continuum. These interactions contribute to the symptomatic presentation of HF patients and affect many co-morbidities of HF. Moreover, neuro-cardiac feedback signals significantly promote aggravation and further progression of HF and are causal in the poor prognosis of HF. The diversity and complexity of heart and brain interactions make it difficult to develop a comprehensive overview. In this paper a systematic approach is proposed to develop a comprehensive atlas of related conditions, signals and disease mechanisms of the interactions between the heart and the brain in HF. The proposed taxonomy is based on pathophysiological principles. Impaired perfusion of the brain may represent one major category, with acute (cardio-embolic) or chronic (haemodynamic failure) low perfusion being sub-categories with mostly different consequences (i.e. ischaemic stroke or cognitive impairment, respectively). Further categories include impairment of higher cortical function (mood, cognition), of brain stem function (sympathetic over-activation, neuro-cardiac reflexes). Treatment-related interactions could be categorized as medical, interventional and device-related interactions. Also interactions due to specific diseases are categorized. A methodical approach to categorize the interdependency of heart and brain may help to integrate individual research areas into an overall picture.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac reflex; Chagas disease; Cognition; Heart failure; Mood; Muscle; Stroke; Takotsubo
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29280256 DOI: 10.1002/ejhf.1100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Heart Fail ISSN: 1388-9842 Impact factor: 15.534