Treatments for CHF:
Heart failure caused by an excessive workload is curable by treating the primary disease, such as anemia or thyrotoxicosis or hypertension or diabetes. Also, curable are forms caused by anatomical problems such as a heart valve defect. These defects can be surgically corrected.
However, for the common forms of heart failure due to damaged heart muscle no known cure (like a heart attack that damages the heart muscle where the attack took place on the organ) but prevention of it happening again can take place in many cases through treatment of the disease or illness with being compliant in following up with your doctor for the disease or illness and being compliant in following doctor’s orders. The worst thing you can do is ignore them. The treatment seeks to improve patients quality of life and length of survival through lifestyle change and drug therapy.
Patients can minimize the effect of heart failure by controlling the risk factors for heart disease they may have. Obvious steps include: Don’t smoke or quit smoking, lose weight if necessary, abstaining from alcohol, making those dietary changes to reduce the amount of salt and fat consumed. Also, regular with modest exercise is also helpful for many patients; though the amount and intensity should be carefully monitored by a physician.
Even with lifestyle changes, most heart failure patients must take medication. Many patients receive 2 or more meds. Types of common medications given are: ACE inhibitors, Digitalis, Diuretics, Hydralazine, and Nitrates.
These are some of the meds given for heart failure. Not all medications are suitable for patients, and more than one drug may be needed. Always review the list your pharmacist provides in the action, side effects, with instructions of how to take the drug to make it most effective in your body with what to look for while on this medication to keep you the patient most informed on what you should be aware of since your on the medication. You should know what your taking.
Results of studies over the years have placed more emphasis on the use of drugs known as angiotensin converting enzymes (ACE) inhibitors. Several studies have indicated that ACE inhibitors improve survival among heart failure patients and may slow perhaps even prevent the loss of the heart pumping activity. This drug prevents the transfer of your enzyme Angiotensin 1 to convert into Angiotensin 2 which prevents the vessels in your body to do vasoconstriction which prevents the pressure in the bloodstream to raise = high B/P (hypertension) but this medication prevents this from happening. By the medication doing this it prevents stress to the heart; with vasoconstriction in causing the B/P to go high this now causes the blood to get to the heart slowly and more difficult causing the heart to pump harder but the ACE inhibitor with allowing vasodilation (opening of vessels) keeps the pressure down to make the job easier= less stress on the heart. Originally these medications where for patients in the treatment of hypertension but they help patients with heart failure, among other things, decreasing the pressure inside the blood vessels causing the heart to do its job easier.
Digitalis increases the force of the heart’s contractions, helping to improve circulation in the body.
Diuretics are for reducing the amount of fluid in the bloodstream and body by releasing them via the kidneys and having us void the excess of water out in our urine, these are useful for patients with fluid retention.
Those who aren’t prescribed or cannot take these meds already mentioned may be given a hydralazine medication and/or a drug in the Nitrate classification, each of which help relax tension in the blood vessels to improve blood flow. Also, both Hydralazine and Nitrates function is they cause vasodilation in the vessels improving blood flow to the heart.
Sometimes heart failure is life threatening. Usually, this happens when drug therapy and lifestyle changes fail to control its symptoms. In such cases, a heart transplant may be the only treatment option. However, candidates for transplantation often have to wait months or even years before a suitable donor heart is found.
Studies over the years indicate that some transplant candidates improve during this waiting period through drug treatment and other therapy, and can be removed from the transplant list.
Transplant candidates who do not improve sometimes need mechanical pumps, which are attached to the heart. Called left ventricular assist device (LVADs), the machine takes over part or virtually all of the heart’s blood-pumping activity. However, current LVADs are not permanent solutions for heart failure but are considered bridges to transplantation. Worldwide, about 3,500 heart transplants were performed annually. The vast majority of these are performed in the United States (2,000-2,300 annually). Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California has performed the most heart transplants in the last three consecutive years performing 95 transplants in 2012 alone. About 800,000 people have a
Class IV heart defect indicating a new organ. The degrees of CHF are I, II, III and IV. In learning more about CHF with heart transplants (including becoming a candidate for one) go to wwwtransplantexperience.com or even hearttransplant.com.
Another surgical procedure for heart failure that is available in America is cardiomyoplasty. This is a surgical procedure in which healthy muscle from another part of the body is wrapped around the heart to provide support for the failing heart. Most often the latissimusHYPERLINK “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latissimus_dorsi_muscle” HYPERLINK “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latissimus_dorsi_muscle”dorsiHYPERLINK “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latissimus_dorsi_muscle” muscle is used for this purpose. A special pacemaker is implanted to make the skeletal muscle contract. The electrical stimulator icauses the back muscle to contract, pumping the blood from the heart (this allows the heart to do its job more effectively).
QUOTE FOR THE DAY: “In addition to relieving patient suffering, research is needed to help reduce the enormous economic and social burdens posed by chronic diseases such as osteoporosis, arthritis, diabetes, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases, cancer, heart disease, and stroke.” Ike Skelton (born December 20, 1931) is an American politician who was the U.S. Representative for Missouri’s 4th congressional district from 1977 to 2011)