eLetters

881 e-Letters

  • Kidney injury attributable to treatment of acute gout in heart failure

    Under the heading "Changes in kidney function during intercurrent illness"(1) mention must be made of the risk of acute kidney injury when nonsteroidal anti inflammatory drugs(NSAIDs) are prescribed for acute gout, the latter complication(the equivalent of "intercurrent illness") sometimes documented as a consequence of diuretic use in congestive heart failure(CHF)(2). Coprescription of NSAIDs, diuretics, and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors(or angiotensin receptor blockers), so-called triple therapy, is associated with increased risk of acute kidney injury(rate ratio 1.31, 95% Confidence Interval 1.12 to 1.53)(3). This was shown in a nested case-control study which enrolled patients in whom hypertension was the indication for prescription of diuretics and/or angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors(or angiotensin receptor blockers)(3), but might be equally applicable in the context of CHF. Additionally, among CHF patients who have a drug regime which includes spironolactone, the use of NSAIDs might increase the risk of hyperkalaemia. The rationale is that NSAIDs "interfere with the stimulatory effect of prostaglandins on the release of renin"(4). The risk of hyperkalaemia may be compounded by concurrent use of beta adrenergic blocking agents(4).
    For all the above reasons, NSAIDs should be contraindicated in CHF patients with gout. The recommended alternatives include colcichine(5) and intraarticuoar corticosteroids(6), resp...

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  • Iatrogenic atrial septal defect: size matters

    To the Editor,
    We read with interest the paper by Ikenaga et al. (1), who must be commended for their detailed report on the determinants of persistent iatrogenic atrial septal defect (iASD) following percutaneous mitral valve clip (MV clip) placement. The authors found that elevated left atrial (LA) pressure after the MV clip procedure was the main determinant of persistent iASD during follow-up. Remarkably, in spite of their poorer clinical condition, patients with and without persistent iASD had similar outcomes during follow-up. This suggested that interatrial shunt has a benefit in some MV clip patients. Previous studies that evaluated the usefulness of an interatrial shunt device for treating heart failure patients without valve disease also showed a significant benefit of the shunt in patients with high LA pressure (2, 3).
    However, these findings disagree with other findings of the persistence of iASD after MV clip placement with negative outcomes, mainly due to right ventricle (RV) claudication (4). Indeed, previous studies of the interatrial shunt device suggest that the size of the shunt plays a key role in outcomes. Indeed, the ideal shunt size should allow the reduction of LA pressure without hampering right heart function. The maximum interatrial shunt devices are 5 mm2 (3); too large iASDs may increase the Qp/Qs enough to cause RV failure, while too small iASDs may be have negligible hemodynamical and clinical results. No MV clip studies reported...

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  • caveats to reliance on natriuretic peptide levels to trigger referral to secondary care

    An imprtant caveat to reliance on brain natriuretic peptide(BNP) levels > 100 pg/ml to trigger referral to secondary care(1) is that there exists a clinical phenotype of congestive heart failure(CHF) characterised by BNP equal to or less than 100 pg/ml(2).. In the latter study 46 out of 1159 subjects with CHF and left ventricular ejection fraction(LVEF) > 50%, 46 subjects were characterised by BNP equal to or less than 100 pg/ml. Heart failure symptoms such as effort dyspnoea were equally prevalent(93% vs 90%) in subject with BNP equal to or less than 100 pg/ml vs counterparts with BNP > 100 pg/ml(2). The same was true of orthopnoea(48% vs 48%) and paroxysmal nocturanal dyspnoea(28% vs 29%)(2).
    The other caveat is that constrictive pericarditis(CP), an entity characterised by symptoms such as effort dyspnoea and pedal oedema, similar to those in CHF, may be characterised by BNP as low as 50 pg/ml and 88 pg/ml, respectively, in spite of coexistence of New York Heart Association functional class III and IV symptoms(3), and natriuretic propeptide tyype B 147 pg/ml in spite of worsening dyspnoea(4). An overriding consideration is the "diagnostic value of physical examination....in primary care"(5) which includes evaluation of jugular venous pressure(JVP)(5). In the latter study elevation of JVP contributed 12 points towards a score of >54 needed to generate a >70% probability of CHF(5). In CP marked elevation of JVP is almost universal(6)....

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  • Home-based programmes for heart failure can make cardiac rehabilitation more available and affordable

    Editor, We agree with Lavie et al that the current standard model of delivering cardiac rehabilitation (CR) predominantly in hospital or centre based facilities has reached saturation and we should be looking at offering alternatives which could improve the global suboptimal rates of participation in CR. [1] Uptake of CR in heart failure remains particularly poor with rates of less than 20% in Europe. [2].
    Clinicians and commissioners should consider implementing the findings of a UK based multicentre trial on home-based CR [3] which responds to the updated 2018 NICE guidance recommendation that adults with heart failure are offered a “..personalised, exercise-based CR programme – in a format and setting (at home, in the community or in the hospital) that is easily accessible” [https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng106/chapter/Recommendations#cardiac-r... ]
    We believe REACH HF to be the largest randomised trial of home based CR (co-developed by clinicians, academics, caregivers and patients) in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction and it provides important new evidence for a novel home-based CR programme in terms of benefit to patients and their caregivers. [3]
    The results of the REACH HF trial show that it is possible to significantly improve patients’ health related quality of life and that the intervention has a cost of £418 per patient, within th...

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  • challenges to be addressed by the cuffless device

    Given the fact that the entire purpose of blood pressure measurement is to identify the cut-off level of blood pressure that increases the risk for cerebral, cardiac, and renal events, and that "brachial blood pressure can be an imperfect surrogate for central aortic pressure"(1), the latter being independently correlated with incident cardiovascular disease and cardiovascular risk(2), the ultimate test of the utility of the novel cuffless device is the degree to which it deviates from central blood pressure. Only 33% of conventional brachial blood pressure values have been found to lie within 5 mm Hg below or above intra-arterial values(3). The other challenge is the validity of cuffless blood pressure measurements obtained from patients with atrial fibrillation
    References
    (1)Messerli F., Williams B., Ritz E
    Essential hypertension
    Lancet 2007;370:591-603
    (2) Agabiti-Rosei E., Mancia G., O'Rourke MF et al
    Cntral blood pressure measurements and antihypertensive therapy: A consensus statement
    Hypertension 2007;50:154-160
    (3)Manios E., Vemmos K., Tsivgoulis G et al
    Comparison of noninvasive oscillometric and intraarterial blood pressure measurements in hyperacute stroke
    Blood Press Monit 2007;12:149-156

  • Hospitalization for Heart Failure as a Promising Risk Stratification Tool for Pulmonary Hypertension Related to Congenital Heart Disease

    To the Editor, we read with great interest the article by Ntiloudi et al[1], describing hospitalization for heart failure (HF) as a powerful predictor of mortality among adults with pulmonary hypertension related to congenital heart disease (PH-ACHD). Although pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) targeted therapy has improved their survival, long-term complications such as HF hospitalization commonly occurred, and dismal prognosis with a mortality rate of 18.5% deeply broke our heart, thus requiring earlier diagnosis, risk stratification and therapeutic intervention.
    Hospitalization for HF, a sign of clinical worsening, is associated with poor outcomes and generally used as one of composite endpoints in PAH[2], Ntiloudi et al stated nearly one-quarter of patients were hospitalized for HF, and they encountered a ninefold increased mortality risk compared to those not-hospitalized, since NYHA functional class III/IV raised a tenfold risk of death, its combination with HF hospitalization may better predict outcomes. A previous study[3] reported 29% patients with idiopathic and associated PAH were hospitalized for acute right heart failure at least once during a 39.1-month follow up, and those with hospitalizations had worse NYHA functional class, inferior right ventricle function, lower six minute walk test (6MWT) distance and worse outcomes defined by death/transplant (67% vs 33%). These two findings indicated a potential role of HF hospitalization for identifying...

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  • Predictive value of cardiac auscultation for the assessment of valvular heart disease

    Gardezi and colleagues (1) report on the limited accuracy for detection of valvular heart disease (VHD) by cardiac auscultation in asymptomatic patients in primary care. VHD was categorized as either mild or significant and cardiac auscultation was dichotomized in either a present or absent murmur. The authors propose a low sensitivity and modest specificity of cardiac auscultation by general practitioners and by cardiologists to assess VHD.
    However, the authors underestimated the specificity and positive predictive value of cardiac auscultation for the assessment of VHD. Patients with a cardiac murmur in whom, by transthoracic echocardiography, mild VHD was detected were included in the ‘negative’ group for assessing significant VHD and more importantly, vice versa. By doing so, many murmurs are classified as false-positive although VHD was present, either mild or significant. We believe that the “true negative” group only includes those patients without any VHD on echocardiography. This would increase the specificity of cardiac auscultation by general practitioners from 67% to 76% and from 81% to 93% for cardiologists, which results in much higher positive predictive values for significant VHD. While it does not change the reported low sensitivity of cardiac auscultation, which remains rather unsatisfactory, this perspective would make the conclusions of this paper at least a little less detrimental to the good old stethoscope.

    References
    1. Gardezi S...

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  • How to mitigate diagnostic delay in constrictive pericarditis

    Given the fact that constrictive pericarditis is an eminently reversible cause of congestive heart failure(CHF) its timely clinical recognition deserved special mention in the recent review of epidemiology of pericardial diseases in Africa(1). Timely recognition and treatment might, arguably, mitigate the risk of perioperative mortality which is currently of the order of 12.5% to 14%, given the fact that this adverse statistic is principally generated by patients who come to operation in New York Heart Association functional class III and IV(2)(3). Accordingly, what needs to be done is to educate doctors and medical students to identify stigmata which differentiate CP from "run of the mill" CHF so as to expedite early referral of suspected CP to tertiary centres for definitive diagnosis and, hence, timely pericardiectomy.
    According to Little and Freeman, in the typical case of CP, "there will be marked jugular venous distension, hepatic congestion, ascites, and peripheral oedema, while the lungs remain clear"(3). Consequently, on the basis of their series of 30 patients, Evans and Jackson observed that "the presence of distended neck veins in a patient who is able to lie comfortably in the recumbent posture is characteristic of the disease"(4). The jugular venous pressure(JVP) response to a diagnostic trial of diuretic therapy may also be of diagnostic significance(5)(6). In CP, the typical response is that the JVP remains persisten...

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  • a role for point of care scanning in the emergency context

    Point of care scanning for heart murmurs should be made available, not only in heart murmur clinics, but also in the emergency context so as to expedite timely identification of murmurs attributable to cardiovascular disorders that require urgent interventional management . The following are some examples:-
    (i) Acute aortic or mitral valvular regurgitation. The former is typically attributable either to aortic dissection or to Infective endocarditis(IE), and the latter is typically attributable to papillary muscle rupture. In both contexts the murmur is typically soft or even clinically inaudible(1)(2), but timely surgical intervention is life-saving.
    (ii) Ischaemic cerebral infarct attributable to IE-related septic embolus. In some of these patients no murmur can be clinically detected(3). Nevertheless, identification of a murmur would raise the index of suspicion for IE.. If further evidence is obtained to support the diagnosis of IE, thrombolyis would be avoided because of the associated risk of haemorrhagic transformation of the septic crebral infract(3), and thrombectomy would be the safer strategy(4).
    References
    (1) Stout KK., Verrier ED
    Acute valvular regurgitation
    Circulation 2009;119:3232-3241
    (2) Hamirani YS., Dietl CA., Voyles V et al
    Acute aortic regurgitation
    Circulation 2012;126:1121-1126
    (3) Walker KA., Sampson JB., Skalabrin EJ., Majersik JJ
    Clinical characteristics and thrombolytic outc...

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  • misattribution of the source of an aortic systolic murmur

    One of the potential benefits of point of care ultrasonography is that it might mitigate the risk of misattribution of the source of an aortic systolic murmur elicited by auscultation in patients who have clinically significant aortic stenosis(AS). When the murmur of AS is loudest at the cardiac apex there is a risk that it might be misattributed to mitral regurgitation(MR), especially in the presence of atrial fibrillation(AF)(1), given the fact that it is MR, rather than AS, which is a commoner cause of AF. The corollary is to attribute the murmur to severe anaemia(2)(when that murmur is elicited(by auscultation) in a patient who has iron deficiency anaemia attributable to chronic blood loss associated with Heyde's syndrome(3).
    Severe AS-associated hypertension(with systolic blood pressure up to nearly 200 mm Hg)(4) can also dominate clinical decision-making to the exclusion of a focus on AS. Diagnostic confusion is compounded by the fact that hypertension, in its own right, can be the underlying cause of a systolic murmur, sometimes even in the absence of post mortem evidence of calcification at the bases of the cups "nor any other abnormality"(5). The caveat is that, exceptionally, the association of hypertension and a systolic murmur(with suprasternal radiation) may be a late presentation of coarctation of the aorta(6). In the latter example echocardiography revealed a normal looking non-stenotic valve with mild regurgitation(6).
    Refer...

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