Abstract

The clinical syndrome of heart failure is one of the leading causes of hospitalisation and mortality in older adults. An association between cognitive impairment and heart failure is well described but our understanding of the relationship between the two conditions remains limited. In this review we provide a synthesis of available evidence, focussing on epidemiology, the potential pathogenesis, and treatment implications of cognitive decline in heart failure. Most evidence available relates to heart failure with reduced ejection fraction and the syndromes of chronic cognitive decline or dementia. These conditions are only part of a complex heart failure-cognition paradigm. Associations between cognition and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and between acute delirium and heart failure also seem evident and where data are available we will discuss these syndromes. Many questions remain unanswered regarding heart failure and cognition. Much of the observational evidence on the association is confounded by study design, comorbidity and insensitive cognitive assessment tools. If a causal link exists, there are several potential pathophysiological explanations. Plausible underlying mechanisms relating to cerebral hypoperfusion or occult cerebrovascular disease have been described and it seems likely that these may coexist and exert synergistic effects. Despite the prevalence of the two conditions, when cognitive impairment coexists with heart failure there is no specific guidance on treatment. Institution of evidence-based heart failure therapies that reduce mortality and hospitalisations seems intuitive and there is no signal that these interventions have an adverse effect on cognition. However, cognitive impairment will present a further barrier to the often complex medication self-management that is required in contemporary heart failure treatment.

Highlights

  • The clinical syndrome of heart failure is one of the leading causes of hospitalisation and mortality in older adults

  • Heart failure and cognitive impairment – strength of association The co-existence of symptomatic 'heart failure' and 'brain failure' has been recognised for decades, with a description of 'cardiogenic dementia' first introduced in the 1970s

  • Recurrent themes in our synthesis of the literature regarding cognitive impairment (CI) and heart failure' (HF) are a lack of primary data, methodological limitations in available research, and conflicting results

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Summary

Results

HF pts scored lower than control group in short-term verbal memory, short-term visuospatial memory and visual spatial logical ability. HF pts scored worse than those without HF in domains of: attention, verbal fluency, verbal learning No significant difference between pts with moderate or severe HF

53 CAD controls
47 HF-REF 33 HF-PEF
20 CHF underwent
29 CHF pts Outpatients
Findings
Conclusion
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