Heart failure is a disease that affects one of every five people in the world. There is no cure for this disease but there are many ways to help keep it under control and live a healthy life. Heart failure is the inability of the heart muscle to pump blood efficiently, so that is becomes overloaded. The heart enlarges with un-pumped blood and the lungs fill with fluid. This disease was previously referred to as congestive heart failure. Anyone can develop heart failure, mainly as you age your risk of developing heart disease increases. Anyone who has developed this condition has most likely had another heart condition such as coronary artery disease, high blood pressure, and previous heart attacks. Heart failure is a serious condition …show more content…
Shortness of breath during any activity, most common is when you are resting or sleeping. This happens when the blood backs up in the pulmonary veins. That will causes fluid to leak into your lungs. Constant wheezing or coughing that produces red tinted or white mucus will occur. Another symptom of heart failure is swelling throughout the body, but mainly in the legs, ankles, and feet. This is because of the extra fluid in the body tissues which happens when the blood flow coming out of the heart slows down, and blood returning to the heart though the veins backs up which causes fluid to buildup in the tissues. Tiredness and fatigue are also symptoms of heart failure. Any activities that you do throughout the day makes you feel even more tired than you were before. That’s because the heart isn’t able to pump enough blood to meet the needs of the body tissues. Most people will develop one of these signs and symptoms, but it doesn’t necessarily mean that you have heart failure. The best way to know is to contact your physician and have them evaluate your heart. And if you have already been diagnosed with heart failure always be sure to manage and keep track of the symptoms for any
Heart failure may convey that the heart isn’t working anymore, but what it really means is that the heart isn’t pumping as well as it should be (REF). Heart failure is a chronic, progressive condition in which the heart muscle is unable to pump enough blood through to meet the body’s needs for blood and oxygen (REF). At first, the heart tries to make up for this by enlarging, developing more muscle mass, and pumping faster. As this happens, the blood vessels narrow to keep blood pressure up and the body diverts blood away from less important tissues and organs to maintain flow to the heart and brain (REF). Eventually, the body and heart cannot keep up and the patient begins to feel fatigue, breathing problems, weight gain with swelling in the feet, legs, ankles or stomach, and other symptoms that eventually leads to a hospital visit. The body’s coping mechanisms give us better understanding on why many are unaware of their condition until years after the heart declines (REF).
Congestive cardiac failure, also known as heart failure, occurs when the heart is weak and unable to sufficiently supply blood the body needs to function. Heart failure can often be successfully treated with
Heart Failure is a progressive heart disease when the muscle of the heart is weakened so that it cannot pump blood as it should; the blood backs up into the blood vessels around the lungs and the other parts of the body (NHS Choice, 2015). In heart failure, the heart is not able to maintain a normal range cardiac output to meet the metabolic needs of the body (Kemp and Conte, 2012). Heart failure is a major worldwide public health problem, it is the end stage of heart disease and it could lead to high mortality. At present, heart failure is usually associated with old age, given the dramatic increase in the population of older people (ACCF/AHA, 2013). In the USA, there are about 5.7 million adults who have heart failure, about half of the people die within 5 years of diagnosis, and it costs the nation an estimated $30.7 billion each year (ACCF/AHA, 2013).
Nearly 5.1 million people in the United States have been diagnosed with heart failure. Yet so many people don’t have a clue what it is until they have been diagnosed with it. Congestive Heart Failure, or CHF, is a disease that has many symptoms, can be tested and treated, has several causes, and can be avoided.
Congestive Heart Failure is a condition in which the heart is unable to pump a sufficient amount of blood for the body to function. If the heart’s ability to pump blood decreases, blood and fluids may start to pool into the lungs and accumulate in the legs, ankles, and feet causing an edema, shortness of breath, and fatigue. (Heart Failure, 2015, para. 2) The American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology defines heart failure as “a complex clinical syndrome that can result from any structural or functional cardiac disorder that impairs the ability of the ventricles to fill with or eject
Heart failure affects nearly 6 million Americans. It is the leading cause of hospitalization in people older than 65. Roughly 550,000 people are diagnosed with heart failure each year (Emory Healthcare, 2014). Heart failure is a pathologic state where the heart cannot pump enough blood to meet the demand of the body’s metabolic needs or when the ventricle’s ability to fill is impaired. It is not a disease, but rather a complex clinical syndrome. The symptoms of heart failure come from pulmonary vascular congestion and inadequate perfusion of the systemic circulation. Individuals experience orthopnea,
Congestive Heart Failure, also known as "cardiac decompensation, cardiac insufficiency, and cardiac incompetence," (Basic Nursing 1111) is an imbalance in pump function in which the heart is failing and unable to do its work pumping enough blood to meet the needs of the body's other organs. To some people, heart failure is defined as a sudden and complete stoppage of heart activityi.e. that the heart just stops beating. This is an inaccuracy. Heart failure usually develops slowly, often over years, as the heart gradually loses its pumping ability and works less efficiently. CHF is a syndrome that affects individuals in different ways and to different degrees. It is usually a chronic disease. It gradually
The heart is an organ that pumps oxygenated blood to the body and deoxygenated blood to the lungs. Heart failure is when the heart can’t pump blood very well. If the heart fails to work properly, a major system called the circulatory system won’t work properly and therefore the whole human body will fail to work properly because the cells won’t be able get oxygenated blood and use the oxygen to undergo cellular respiration and make energy.
Congestive Heart Failure is when the heart's pumping power is weaker than normal. It does not mean the heart has stopped working. The blood moves through the heart and body at a slower rate, and pressure in the heart increases. This means; the heart cannot pump enough oxygen and nutrients to meet the body's needs. The chambers of the heart respond by stretching to hold more blood to pump through the body or by becoming more stiff and thickened. This only keeps the blood moving for a short while. The heart muscle walls weaken and are unable to pump as strongly. This makes the kidneys respond by causing the body to retain fluid and sodium. When the body builds up with fluids, it becomes congested. Many conditions can cause heart
According to the American Heart Association (2015), heart failure is defined as “a chronic, progressive condition in which the heart muscle is unable to pump enough blood through to meet the body 's needs for blood and oxygen. Basically, the heart can 't keep up with its workload”. Congestive heart failure is a progressive illness that effects millions of Americans every year. Many other illnesses can lead to the development of congestive heart failure. Examples of these diseases include: coronary artery disease, past heart attack, high blood pressure, abnormal heart valve, heart muscle disease such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy or inflammation such as myocarditis, congenital heart disease, severe lung disease, diabetes, obesity and asthma. (American Heart Association, 2015 (Centers for
Congestive heart failure is an older name for heart failure. Congestive heart failure takes place when the heart is unable to maintain an adequate circulation of blood in the bodily tissues or to pump out the venous blood returned to it by the veins (Merriam-Webster). The heart is split into two distinct pumping structures, the right side of the heart and the left side of the heart. Appropriate cardiac performance involves each ventricle to extract even quantities of blood over intervals. If the volume of blood reimbursed to the heart develops more than both ventricles can manage, the heart can no longer be an efficient pump.
Heart failure is a condition in which the heart muscle becomes too weak to maintain an adequate cardiac output to meet the body’s
Heart failure is a chronic, degenerative condition where the heart muscles progressively weaken until the heart is unable to pump an adequate supply of blood to the systemic circulation. The body functions optimally when it has sufficient supply of oxygen and nutrients from the blood. Conversely, a low supply of oxygen will cause severe weakness, fatigue and dyspnea.
A congestive heart failure is a chronic condition in which the heart doesn’t pump blood as well as it could.
Heart failure (HF) is failure of the heart muscle to sufficiently provide oxygenated blood to the organs of the body. This is a disease of the cardiac muscle. This causes a reduction in the volume of blood the heart pumps and hence not enough blood to circulate and return to the heart and lungs. This then results in the leakage of fluid, mainly water, from the capillary blood vessels which are responsible for the common symptoms of heart failure; fatigue, shortness of breath and swelling [2]. Chronic Heart Failure (CHF) is a common clinical syndrome caused by Coronary Artery Diseases (CAD), hypertension, valvular heart disease, and/or primary cardiomyopathy [3]. Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD) is mainly reduction of blood flow in the coronary arteries to supply the heart with oxygen and nutrients due to narrowing of the coronary arteries normally due to the build up of fat deposits in the blood vessel (atheroma).