Abstract
In patients with decompensated chronic congesive heart failure (CHF), intensive unloading therapy allows an acute decrease in ventricular filling pressures and improves long-term prognosis. Because elderly patients do not routinely undergo invasive hemodynamic evaluation, they are generally denied such a pharmacologic approach. We prospectively characterized the acute hemodynamic response to intensive unloading and its prognostic significance in a elderly population with CHF who were hospitalized for cardiac decompensation. Fifty-nine patients aged >70 years with left ventricular systolic dysfunction underwent intensive unloading therapy (furosemide and nitroprusside) tailored to reduce ventricular filling pressures to near-normal levels. The hemodynamic parameters were monitored by Doppler echocardiography. At baseline, left and right ventricular filling pressures were 21 ± 3 and 10 ± 3 mm Hg, respectively. Although all patients experienced a relevant improvement in clinical status during hospital stay, a significant reduction of ventricular filling pressures was detected at discharge in only 40 of them (68%) (responders), whereas 19 patients (32%) had a deficient response to therapy (nonresponders). This unfavorable behavior was predicted by the presence of renal dysfunction at admission. During 19-month follow-up, death due to cardiovascular causes occurred in 8 of 40 responders (20%) and in 9 of 19 nonresponders (47%) (p <0.005). Hospitalizations for cardiovascular causes were more frequent in the nonresponders (58% vs 8%, p <0.0001). Thus, a deficient hemodynamic response to intensive unloading treatment is not infrequent in elderly patients with decompensated CHF. This behavior is predicted by renal dysfunction at admission and is associated with poorer outcome.
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