Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction: What Is in a Name?

Evidence-based management of heart failure (HF) with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF; HFpEF) remains a major gap in the care of patients with HF. Clinical trials directed toward the population with HFpEF have been disappointing, although renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system blockade appears to prevent HF in populations predisposed to HFpEF. This paradox may partly be because of inhomogeneity within the HF populations studied. Although the term HFpEF is often used to imply a specific diagnosis, in fact this constellation may be due to a large variety of disease states with different underlying pathophysiologic mechanisms. Furthermore, in patients with HF, regardless of LVEF, myocardial dysfunction is common during both systole and diastole, and LVEF is influenced at least as much by the pattern of left ventricular remodeling as it is by myocardial contractility. The most common clinical-pathologic syndrome responsible for HFpEF is strongly associated with hypertension, with the metabolic syndrome, and with older age. Recent findings support that this condition is mediated via endothelial dysfunction, inflammation, oxidative stress, myocyte hypertrophy, and altered collagen turnover. We, therefore, propose the terms “metabolic HF” and “senile HF” to describe this specific disease state. The search for therapies designed to prevent, halt, or reverse HF should more strongly focus on populations carefully selected to represent specific underlying car...
Source: Cardiology in Review - Category: Cardiology Tags: Review Articles Source Type: research