| Literature DB >> 33708417 |
Wilson Matthew Raffaello1, Joshua Henrina2, Ian Huang1,3, Michael Anthonius Lim1, Leonardo Paskah Suciadi2, Bambang Budi Siswanto4, Raymond Pranata1.
Abstract
Heart failure is currently one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality. Patients with heart failure often present with acute symptoms and may have a poor prognosis. Recent evidence shows differences in clinical characteristics and outcomes between de novo heart failure (DNHF) and acute decompensated chronic heart failure (ADCHF). Based on a better understanding of the distinct pathophysiology of these two conditions, new strategies may be considered to treat heart failure patients and improve outcomes. In this review, the authors elaborate distinctions regarding the clinical characteristics and outcomes of DNHF and ADCHF and their respective pathophysiology. Future clinical trials of therapies should address the potentially different phenotypes between DNHF and ADCHF if meaningful discoveries are to be made.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac failure; heart failure; medication; new onset; paradigm; phenotype; therapy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33708417 PMCID: PMC7919682 DOI: 10.15420/cfr.2020.20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Card Fail Rev ISSN: 2057-7540
Differences Between Acute Decompensated Chronic Heart Failure and De Novo Heart Failure
| Acute Decompensated Chronic Heart Failure | De Novo Heart Failure | |
|---|---|---|
| Patient characteristics | Older population, worse baseline status and laboratory findings Known history of underlying heart failure | No history of heart failure |
| Comorbidities | IHD, COPD, AF, diabetes, stroke/TIA History of CABG and PCI more frequent | Less frequent |
| Trigger events | Medication (poor compliance, resistance), infections, diet (excessive sodium intake), cardiovascular complications, interventions (surgery), drugs (alcohol, digitalis) | Cardiac ischaemia or valvular incompetence (acute MI, acute mitral regurgitation), inflammatory (viral myocarditis) and toxic (drug-induced) insults |
| Clinical presentation | Dyspnoea, orthopnoea, lower limb oedema, ascites, weight gain | Cardiogenic shock and acute pulmonary oedema |
| Main pathophysiology | Pulmonary and systemic vascular congestion caused by LV dysfunction, maladaptive neurohumoral activation, fluid overload and redistribution | Acute haemodynamic derangement caused by LV systolic dysfunction |
| Mortality | Higher mortality rates | Lower mortality rates compared with ADCHF patients |
Source: Kurmani et al.,[9] Xanthopoulos et al.,[10] Hummel et al.,[13] Pranata et al.[14] and Younis et al.[16] CABG = coronary artery bypass grafting; COPD = chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; IHD = ischaemic heart disease; LV = left ventricular; PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention; TIA = transient ischaemic attack.