When you have been diagnosed with heart failure, the team at the Heart Failure Clinic at Parkview Heart Institute is here to answer your questions and provide you with complete and qualified care.
The Heart Failure Clinic provides:
- Specialized care by the Heart Failure Clinic team
- Assistance in monitoring your symptoms
- Easy access to medications, if needed; follow-up appointments; cardiology testing and services in an outpatient setting.
- Education about your medications, dietary considerations, your smoking cessation and physical activities to strengthen your heart function.
- Specialized treatment and rehabilitation, all in one convenient location.
- Answers to your questions.
What is heart failure?
Heart failure is a combination of signs and symptoms that result from a weakened heart not pumping enough blood throughout the body. Heart failure can take several years to develop and will worsen if not treated.
Signs and symptoms
Depending on how weak the heart is or how well heart failure is controlled, symptoms may range from mild to severe.
Common symptoms include:
- Shortness of breath
- Swelling in the ankles or lower legs
- Sudden unexplained weight gain (2–3 pounds overnight or more than 5 pounds in a week)
Other symptoms may include:
- Chest pain or changes in heartbeat
- Loss of appetite
- Dry, hacking cough
- Confused or unclear thinking
- Weakness, dizziness or fatigue
If appropriate, your physician will refer you to the Heart Failure Clinic at Parkview Heart Institute.
Causes
Health conditions that lead to additional “wear and tear” on the heart may cause heart failure to develop. These conditions include:
- Coronary artery disease
- Past heart attack
- Abnormal function of a heart valve
- Heart muscle disease or inflammation
- Heart defects present at birth
- Severe lung disease
- Diabetes
Risk Factors
Heart failure is among the illnesses in a broader category known as heart disease. Heart disease is a chronic illness that can start in childhood and continue throughout one’s lifetime. Many of the same risk factors that increase the chance of developing heart disease in general also make developing heart failure more likely.
- Uncontrollable risk factors include:
- Increasing age
- Family history of cardiovascular disease
- Ethnicity (African-American, Mexican-American, American Indian, Pacific Islander or Asian)
Risk factors that you can control through lifestyle or medical treatment include:
- Smoking or exposure to secondhand smoke
- High blood pressure
- High levels of LDL cholesterol
- Low levels of HDL cholesterol
- Lack of exercise
- Diabetes
- Excess weight (especially weight around the waist)
- Stressful lifestyle
Treatments
At the Heart Failure Clinic, the care team will determine the best treatment options for you. Recommended treatment will depend on your medical history, a physical exam and how advanced your condition is currently. Treatment is often addressed through these approaches:
- Dietary changes which reduce sodium, cholesterol and saturated fat
- Medications to improve heart function
- Daily weight monitoring to detect fluid retention early
- Exercise to maintain heart function
- Quitting smoking
Typical medications for heart failure include:
- Angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBS) – treats heart failure and high blood pressure
- Angiotensin II receptor - Neprilysin inhibitor (ARNIs) treats heart failure and high blood pressure, as well as helps the body to eliminate extra water and salt
- Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors – treats heart failure and high blood pressure
- Aldosterone Antagonist (spironolactone or Epleronone) treats heart failure and is a potassium sparing diuretic
- Beta blockers – treats heart failure and high blood pressure while preventing overly fast heart rates
- Diuretics (also called “water pills”) – treats blood pressure and excess body fluid by prompting the kidneys to release water and salt through the urine.
Diet Modifications
Individuals often need to adjust their diets following a diagnosis of heart failure. The recommended sodium (salt) intake for heart failure patients is 1,500 – 2,000 mg per day. One teaspoon of table salt contains 2,400 mg of sodium!
Limiting sodium may be the most effective change in an individual’s daily activities to reduce symptoms.
Tips for reducing sodium:
- Eliminate the salt shaker
- Read food labels and be aware of sodium content
- Avoid highly processed foods and over-the-counter medications, such as:
- Canned and prepared foods
- Milk products
- Deli meats
- Fast food
- Seasonings with monosodium glutamate (MSG)
- Stomach, cold and headache medicines
Heart Failure Clinic appointments and referrals
Find information for patients and medical professionals about how to be referred and what to expect as a new patient.