Heart Failure
Heart Failure
Prepared By
Hizbullah Khan
Presented & Modified By
Asghar
OBJECTIVES
Define heart failure.
Differentiate between:
Systolic Versus Diastolic Failure
Right Side Versus Left Side Failure
Acute Vs Chronic Heart Failure
Describe the pathological mechanism underlying the
manifestation of heart failure.
Discuss the clinical manifestation of heart failure
Discuss medical, and nursing management of
patients with heart failure.
Essential Terms
Stroke Volume: The amount expelled by each contraction of
the ventricles.
Cardiac Output: The amount of blood pumped out of the
heart in 1 minute. SV x HR = CO
Factors Affecting Stroke Volume:
Preload: The stretch of myocardial fibers at end diastole.
After load: force that the ventricles must develop during
systole in order to eject the stroke volume.
Terms
Frank Starling Law: states that the greater the myocardial
fibers length or stretch, the greater will be its force of
contraction.
larger volume of blood flows into the ventricle, the blood
stretch the walls of the heart, causing a greater expansion
during diastole, which in turn increases the force of the
contraction.
Ejection Fraction:
percentage of blood pumped out of the ventricles with each
contraction. a normal ejection fraction is about 55% to 70%.
Heart Failure
Definition: Complex syndrome resulting from any
functional or structural disorder of the heart that results
in or increases the risk of developing manifestations of low
cardiac output and/or pulmonary or systemic congestion.
According to the agency for health care policy and
research (AHCPR) HF guidelines panel (1994) HF is a
clinical syndrome characterized by signs and symptoms of
fluid overload or of inadequate tissue perfusion.
HF is the inability of the heart to pump sufficient blood to
meet the needs of the tissues for oxygen and nutrients.
Systolic Vs Diastolic Dysfunction
Causes
Hypertension
Myocardial infarction and myocardial ischemia
Stenosis or regurgitation of the aortic or mitral valve
Left Ventricular Dysfunction.
Signs And Symptoms
Dyspnea/ Orthopnea
Paroxysmal Nocturnal Dyspnea
Cough (Crackles)
Low Oxygen Saturation
Oliguria
Slow Capillary Refill
Dizziness Lightheadedness Confusion, Restlessness
Altered Digestion
Increase Heart Rate
Weak Thready Pulse
Third Heart Sound
Acute Vs Chronic Heart
Role of a nurse
Administering the medications and for assessing their
beneficial and detrimental effects to the patient.
Hemodynamic monitoring
Weighing the patient daily
Auscultation of lung sounds at least daily to detect an
increase or decrease in pulmonary crackles
Diet plan
I/O monitoring
Nursing Diagnosis
• Activity intolerance related to imbalance between
oxygen supply and demand because of decreased CO.
• Excess fluid volume related to excess fluid or sodium
intake and retention of fluid because of HF and its
medical therapy.
• Anxiety related to breathlessness and restlessness from
inadequate oxygenation.
• Powerlessness related to inability to perform role
responsibilities because of chronic illness and
hospitalizations.
• Noncompliance related to lack of knowledge
HEALTH PROMOTION
Patients with heart failure should be given advice on:
Smoking cessation
Abstaining from alcohol
Reducing salt intake
Having a yearly flu vaccination and pneumonia
vaccination.
Exercise and rehabilitation
Medication compliance.
THANK YOU
• STENOSIS OF THE PULMONARY ARTERY AT ITS POINT OF ORIGIN,
• WHICH INCREASES RIGHT VENTRICULAR WORKLOAD
• • VENTRICULAR SEPTAL DEFECT, I.E. AN ABNORMAL
• COMMUNICATING HOLE BETWEEN THE TWO VENTRICLES, JUST
• BELOW THE ATRIOVENTRICULAR VALVES
• • AORTIC MISPLACEMENT, I.E. THE ORIGIN OF THE AORTA IS
• DISPLACED TO THE RIGHT SO THAT IT IS IMMEDIATELY ABOVE
• THE SEPTAL DEFECT
• • RIGHT VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY TO COUNTERACT THE
• PULMONARY STENOSIS.