Devices in Heart Failure

  • Gafoor S
  • Franke J
  • Lam S
  • et al.
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Abstract

Congestive heart failure has long been one of the most serious medical conditions in the United States; in fact, in the United States alone, heart failure accounts for 6.5 million days of hospitalization each year. One important goal of heart-failure therapy is to inhibit the progression of congestive heart failure through pharmacologic and device-based therapies. Therefore, there have been efforts to develop device-based therapies aimed at improving cardiac reserve and optimizing pump function to meet metabolic requirements. The course of congestive heart failure is often worsened by other conditions, including new-onset arrhythmias, ischemia and infarction, valvulopathy, decompensation, end-organ damage, and therapeutic refractoriness, that have an impact on outcomes. The onset of such conditions is sometimes heralded by subtle pathophysiologic changes, and the timely identification of these changes may promote the use of preventive measures. Consequently, device-based methods could in the future have an important role in the timely identification of the subtle pathophysiologic changes associated with congestive heart failure.

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APA

Gafoor, S., Franke, J., Lam, S., Reinartz, M., Bertog, S., Vaskelyte, L., … Sievert, H. (2015). Devices in Heart Failure. Circulation Journal, 79(2), 237–244. https://doi.org/10.1253/circj.cj-14-1354

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