Login / Signup

Dependence and reduced motor function in heart failure: future directions for well-being.

Hidetaka HibinoStacey L Gorniak
Published in: Heart failure reviews (2021)
While patients with heart failure experience a wide range of symptoms, evidence is mounting that patients with heart failure suffer from reduced functional independence. Given that the number of patients with heart failure is rising and considering the adverse outcomes of reduced functional independence, understanding the underlying mechanisms of reduced functionality in patients with heart failure is of increasing importance. Yet, little information exists on how heart failure negatively affects functional independence, including motor function. This article summarizes reports of reduced independence and highlights its significant adverse outcomes in the patients with heart failure. Finally, this article discusses potential causes of reduced independence based on existing reports of impaired central and peripheral nervous systems in the patients with heart failure. Overall, the article provides a solid foundation for future studies investigating motor impairments in patients with heart failure. Such studies may lead to advances in treatment and prevention of reduced independence associated with heart failure, which ultimately contribute to the well-being of patients with heart failure.
Keyphrases
  • heart failure
  • atrial fibrillation
  • left ventricular
  • current status
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • acute heart failure
  • cardiac resynchronization therapy
  • health information
  • adverse drug
  • chemotherapy induced