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Acute heart failure and valvular heart disease: A scientific statement of the Heart Failure Association, the Association for Acute CardioVascular Care and the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions of the European Society of Cardiology

Authors :
Chioncel, Ovidiu
Adamo, Marianna
Nikolaou, Maria
Parissis, John
Mebazaa, Alexandre
Yilmaz, Mehmet Birhan
Hassager, Christian
Moura, Brenda
Bauersachs, Johann
Harjola, Veli-Pekka
Antohi, Elena-Laura
Ben-Gal, Tuvia
Collins, Sean P
Iliescu, Vlad Anton
Abdelhamid, Magdy
Čelutkienė, Jelena
Adamopoulos, Stamatis
Lund, Lars H
Cicoira, Mariantonietta
Masip, Josep
Skouri, Hadi
Gustafsson, Finn
Rakisheva, Amina
Ahrens, Ingo
Mortara, Andrea
Janowska, Ewa A
Almaghraby, Abdallah
Damman, Kevin
Miro, Oscar
Huber, Kurt
Ristic, Arsen
Hill, Loreena
Mullens, Wilfried
Chieffo, Alaide
Bartunek, Jozef
Paolisso, Pasquale
Bayes-Genis, Antoni
Anker, Stefan D
Price, Susanna
Filippatos, Gerasimos
Ruschitzka, Frank
Seferovic, Petar
Vidal-Perez, Rafael
Vahanian, Alec
Metra, Marco
Mcdonagh, Theresa A
Barbato, Emanuele
Coats, Andrew J S
Rosano, Giuseppe M C
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Acute heart failure (AHF) represents a broad spectrum of disease states, resulting from the interaction between an acute precipitant and a patient's underlying cardiac substrate and comorbidities. Valvular heart disease (VHD) is frequently associated with AHF. AHF may result from several precipitants that add an acute haemodynamic stress superimposed on a chronic valvular lesion or may occur as a consequence of a new significant valvular lesion. Regardless of the mechanism, clinical presentation may vary from acute decompensated heart failure to cardiogenic shock. Assessing the severity of VHD as well as the correlation between VHD severity and symptoms may be difficult in patients with AHF because of the rapid variation in loading conditions, concomitant destabilization of the associated comorbidities and the presence of combined valvular lesions. Evidence-based interventions targeting VHD in settings of AHF have yet to be identified, as patients with severe VHD are often excluded from randomized trials in AHF, so results from these trials do not generalize to those with VHD. Furthermore, there are not rigorously conducted randomized controlled trials in the setting of VHD and AHF, most of the data coming from observational studies. Thus, distinct to chronic settings, current guidelines are very elusive when patients with severe VHD present with AHF, and a clear-cut strategy could not be yet defined. Given the paucity of evidence in this subset of AHF patients, the aim of this scientific statement is to describe the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and overall treatment approach for patients with VHD who present with AHF.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..7b92501a8346f85d89456193bd9c4c81