Heart failure is not one disease, it’s important to diagnose heart failure type precisely for best treatment options. Shortness of breath is often the only symptom of HFpEF. Leading heart and lung disease expert. What is heart failure with preserved ejection fraction? Dr. Anton Titov, MD. Why is it important to find the precise diagnosis of heart failure? Dr. Anton Titov, MD. What treatment options are available for patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction? Dr. Anton Titov, MD. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction is also known as diastolic dysfunction. It is abbreviated as HFpEF [“Hef-Pef"]. This is how people call heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. It is probably one of the most difficult aspects of treating heart failure right now. Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction is more prevalent than heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. We think about with systolic heart failure and congestive heart failure. This is what happens in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. People get older. (HFpEF) Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction is often a complication of the metabolic syndrome, diabetes, cholesterol hyperlipidemia, and obesity. The heart starts to become stiffer. That stiffness increases with time. Heart muscle starts to fail at relaxation. The relaxation phase of the heart contractility becomes compromised. The response to that is to build up fluid in the body system. The kidneys start to retain fluid. Blood volume goes up. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. With volume we get increased pressure inside heart chambers. Over time you start to see a rise in pressure in the left side of the heart at the end of the filling phase. We see an increased left atrial pressure. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. We see an increased left ventricular end diastolic pressure. That in itself creates an inefficient pumping system. Patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction have exertional intolerance. They have shortness of breath with physical exertion because of that. Then over time there can be an increase in that pressure back-fill into the lungs. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. If not treated aggressively, the vessels in the lungs start to become stiffer and thicker. It is similar as any other form of pulmonary artery hypertension. Then you start to impact right ventricular function. One of the difficult things is this. We don't have any clear targeted therapy for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. We only can use diuretics. We can treat metabolic syndrome. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. There are some data that suggests sildenafil and tadalafil could help patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. Phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors could be helpful in patients who already have had a change in their pulmonary vascular resistance. We can treat increase in pulmonary vascular resistance with Viagra and Cialis. But otherwise we cannot help these patients. We don't have a good treatment at this time for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. Is there anything for HFpEF therapy from a medical devices standpoint? Dr. Anton Titov, MD. Can you treat heart failure with preserved ejection fraction with implanted medical devices? Dr. Anton Titov, MD. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. Because medical devices in heart failure are developing quite rapidly. There are even surgical approaches to heart failure now. There is no effective therapy for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. Obviously, for reduced ejection fraction there are lots of device treatment options. There is a growing device therapy options for left-sided heart failure. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. There are ventricular assist devices. There are other devices that create augmented blood flow. But for HFpEF itself we have little targeted therapy. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. You can look at it from a physiologic standpoint. Patients who have hypertrophic cardiomyopathy often have similar physiology. But it is extreme compared to heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. In those patients it is a different disease. Dr. Aaron Waxman, MD. Patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are candidates for transplant. But for HFpEF itself generally that is not a disease state that we think about heart transplant. Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction is rarely an indication for heart transplantation.
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