期刊论文详细信息
Altered Hemodynamics and End-Organ Damage in Heart Failure Impact on the Lung and Kidney
Article
关键词: PRESERVED EJECTION FRACTION;    PULMONARY CAPILLARY PRESSURES;    RESPIRATORY MUSCLE STRENGTH;    SIDED FILLING PRESSURES;    ARTERY-WEDGE PRESSURE;    RENAL VENOUS-PRESSURE;    LEFT ATRIAL PRESSURE;    CARDIAC-OUTPUT;    PROTEIN CONCENTRATION;    VASCULAR-RESISTANCE;   
DOI  :  10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.119.045409
来源: SCIE
【 摘 要 】

Heart failure is characterized by pathologic hemodynamic derangements, including elevated cardiac filling pressures (backward failure), which may or may not coexist with reduced cardiac output (forward failure). Even when normal during unstressed conditions such as rest, hemodynamics classically become abnormal during stressors such as exercise in patients with heart failure. This has important upstream and downstream effects on multiple organ systems, particularly with respect to the lungs and kidneys. Hemodynamic abnormalities in heart failure are affected by processes that extend well beyond the cardiac myocyte, including important roles for pericardial constraint, ventricular interaction, and altered venous capacity. Hemodynamic perturbations have widespread effects across multiple heart failure phenotypes, ranging from reduced to preserved ejection fraction, acute to chronic disease, and cardiogenic shock to preserved perfusion states. In the lung, hemodynamic derangements lead to the development of abnormalities in ventilatory control and efficiency, pulmonary congestion, capillary stress failure, and eventually pulmonary vascular disease. In the kidney, hemodynamic perturbations lead to sodium and water retention and worsening renal function. Improved understanding of the mechanisms by which altered hemodynamics in heart failure affect the lungs and kidneys is needed in order to design novel strategies to improve clinical outcomes.

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