The name of this condition can be a little confusing. When you have heart failure, it doesn't mean your heart stopped beating. What's really going on is that your heart can't pump blood as well as a healthy one.
The chambers of your heart may respond by stretching to carry more blood to pump through your body. They may become stiffer and thicker. This helps keep blood moving for a while, but in time, your heart muscle walls may get weaker.
Your kidneys react by causing your body to hold on to water and salt. Fluid may start to build up in your arms, legs, ankles, feet, lungs, or other organs.
The American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology have defined four stages of heart failure to help people understand how the condition changes over time and the kinds of treatments that are used for each.
Heart failure can be brought on by many conditions that damage the heart.
Coronary artery disease is a problem with the arteries that supply blood and oxygen to your heart. It means less blood flows to your heart muscle. When the arteries narrow or get blocked, your heart becomes starved for oxygen and nutrients and can't pump as well.
Heart attack may happen when a coronary artery is blocked suddenly, which stops the flow of blood to your heart muscle.
Cardiomyopathy is damage to your heart muscle. It can be caused by artery or blood flow problems, infections, and alcohol and drug abuse. Other diseases or genetic issues can also bring it on. Make sure your doctor knows your family's health history.
Conditions that overwork the heart include things like high blood pressure, heart valve disease, thyroid disease, kidney disease, diabetes, or heart defects you've had since you were born.
Systolic heart failure happens when your heart muscle doesn't squeeze with enough force. When that's the case, it pumps less oxygen-rich blood through your body.
With diastolic heart failure, your heart squeezes normally, but the ventricle -- the main pumping chamber -- doesn't relax properly. Less blood can enter your heart, and the blood pressure in your lungs goes up. When that happens, you get fluid in your lungs, legs, and belly.
This is the period when you're more likely to get heart failure. You may be in this stage if you have:
Your chances are also greater when you have a history of:
Your doctor will probably recommend regular exercise and that you stop drinking alcohol, smoking, and using illegal drugs. You'll want to take steps to lower high blood pressure or high cholesterol.
If you have high blood pressure or had a heart attack, your doctor may prescribe beta-blockers.
When you have diabetes, high blood pressure, or other heart and blood vessel conditions like coronary artery disease, you may need to take an ACE inhibitor or an angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB).
You're in this phase if you never had symptoms of heart failure but you're diagnosed with systolic left ventricular dysfunction, which means the left chamber of your heart doesn't pump well. You may be in this group if you had or have:
Treatment will depend on your situation. Your doctor may suggest an ACE inhibitor or angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB), or beta-blockers after a heart attack. They may add an aldosterone inhibitor if your symptoms continue while you're taking beta-blockers and ACE/ARB medications.
Surgery can repair coronary arteries and valves, or valves which may need to be replaced. Sometimes an implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD) will help.
You're in this phase if you have systolic heart failure along with symptoms such as:
Your doctor may prescribe:
If your symptoms don't go away, you may need to take:
Devices such as a biventricular pacemaker or implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD) may help.
You may need to change some things about your day-to-day life, too:
You're in this phase if you have systolic heart failure and advanced symptoms after you get medical care.
Some of the treatments from stages A, B, and C will help stage D, too. Your doctor may also discuss:
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