Abstract

Cardiovascular diseases including heart failure represent a common disease in patients referred for anesthesia. In most cases, heart failure is caused by left ventricular dysfunction due to coronary heart disease. The aims of the treatment of chronic heart failure are the relief of symptoms, the improvement of prognosis and the prevention of the progression of heart failure. The first-line treatment involves the underlying heart disease such as myocardial revascularisation procedures in coronary heart disease or the correction of valve diseases. The pharmacological therapy depends on the stage of heart failure and symptoms of the patient. Heart failure therapy includes ACE-inhibitors, betablockers, diuretics und digitalis. Nitrates can be prescribed in patients with symptomatic heart failure despite adequate therapy but calcium antagonists are not recommended. Repeated or prolonged treatment with positive inotropic agents like phosphodiesterase inhibitors or beta-adrenergic drugs increases mortality but this is commonly used in acute stages of heart failure refractory to treatment. Interactions of ACE-inhibitors or AT1- antagonists with anesthetic agents can lead to severe hypotension especially in hypovolemic patients. Whether those drugs should be continued perioperatively or not has been controversially discussed. The use of betablockers has a positive impact on cardiac morbidity and mortality during and early after surgery. Chronic treatment with diuretics can be associated with hypovolemia and an imbalance of electrolytes leading to hypotension and arrhythmia during anesthesia but careful evaluation prior to anesthesia can avoid such complications. The continuation of digitalis during anesthesia has been controversially discussed due to the various interactions with anesthetics.

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