Acute right heart failure

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Abstract

Heart failure is defined as a life-threatening complex clinical syndrome with exacerbation of symptoms signifying decompensation and requires emergent treatment. In its acute state it presents within 24 hours with symptoms such as shortness of breath, volume overload including pulmonary edema, sometimes forward failure and even cardiogenic shock. Two forms of acute heart failure exist: newly diagnosed "de novo" or acutely decompensated chronic heart failure. This chapter summarizes the clinical and prognostic classification of acute right heart failure, epidemiology, diagnostic work-up and the principles behind treatment and management options that focus on preload optimization, afterload reduction and improvement of contractility.

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APA

Alcantara, C. A. P., Chandra, A., Morvey, D., & von Schwarz, E. R. (2018). Acute right heart failure. In Right Heart Pathology: From Mechanism to Management (pp. 215–225). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-73764-5_10

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