Cachexia is more closely associated with hormonal changes in CHF than conventional measures of the severity of CHF. This study suggests that the syndrome of heart failure progresses to cardiac cachexia if the normal metabolic balance between catabolism and anabolism is altered.
A high VE-VCO2 slope selects patients with more severe heart failure and is an independent prognostic marker. The VE-VCO2 slope may be used as a supplementary index in the assessment of patients with chronic heart failure.
Patients with chronic HF have reduced quadriceps maximal isometric strength. This weakness occurs as a result of both quantitative and qualitative abnormalities of the muscle. With increasing exercise limitation there is increasing muscle weakness. This progressive weakness occurs predominantly as a result of loss of quadriceps bulk. In patients, this muscular atrophy becomes a major determinant of exercise capacity.
A link between increased peripheral chemosensitivity and impaired autonomic control, including baroreflex inhibition, is demonstrated. The clinical importance of this phenomenon warrants further investigation.
Nonsurgical septal reduction significantly reduces left ventricular outflow tract obstruction and improves symptoms in some patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. The technique may provide an alternative to surgical myomectomy in selected patients.
An augmented peripheral chemoreflex is a common finding in chronic heart failure patients, one associated with increasing severity and with the exercise hyperpnoea seen in the condition. That there was an excess of patients with non-sustained ventricular tachycardia in the group with an augmented peripheral chemoreflex may be related to the chemoreflex-driven sympathetic stimulation. The peripheral chemoreflex may be important in the pathophysiology of chronic heart failure, both in terms of symptoms and exercise limitation.
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