'Acute Heart Failure': Should We Abandon the Term Altogether?
Sam StrawAndreas NappKlaus K WittePublished in: Current heart failure reports (2022)
Although hospitalisation for worsening heart failure confers a poor prognosis, much of this reflects chronic disease severity. Most patients survive hospitalisation with most deaths occurring in the post-discharge 'vulnerable phase'. Current evidence supports four classes of medications proven to reduce cardiovascular mortality for those who have heart failure with a reduced ejection fraction, with recent trials suggesting worsening heart failure events are opportunities to optimise these therapies. Abandoning the term 'acute heart failure' has the potential to give greater priority to initiating proven pharmacological and device therapies during decompensation episodes, in order to improve outcomes for those who are at the greatest risk.
Keyphrases
- acute heart failure
- heart failure
- poor prognosis
- long non coding rna
- end stage renal disease
- preterm infants
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- left ventricular
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- prognostic factors
- gestational age
- type diabetes
- patient reported outcomes
- insulin resistance
- climate change
- human health
- patient reported