Nurse practitioner Sally Brush, Dr. Dale Renlund and R.N. Charmain Nemelka will answer hotline questions.
Tom Smart, Deseret Morning News
Heart failure is common, expensive to treat and has high morbidity and mortality. It doesn't discriminate based on age or gender or race. It's a devastating equal-opportunity disease that affects nearly 5 million Americans.
It's also very treatable, according to Dr. Dale G. Renlund, medical director of the LDS Hospital Heart Failure Program, who will be one of the featured experts on the Deseret Morning News/Intermountain Healthcare Hotline Saturday. Renlund, nurse practitioner Sally Brush and registered nurse Charmain Nemelka will answer questions from 10 a.m. to noon. All calls are confidential.
Only since 1985 have treatments been available that are known to prolong life in heart failure patients. Now a variety of treatments offer both survival benefit and better quality of life, Renlund says.
Treatment success hinges in part on early diagnosis. But prevention is even better.
Renlund says that one-third of heart transplants result from poorly controlled hypertension, which is either not diagnosed or is inadequately treated. At least another third come from coronary heart disease, usually caused by high cholesterol or risk factors like smoking.
While heart transplants can cure heart failure, they are "in many, many cases the failure of a system to prevent or intervene early to prevent progression to end-stage heart failure," says Renlund, who is also a professor of internal medicine at the University of Utah School of Medicine and medical director of the UTAH Cardiac Transplant Program. The UTAH acronym stands for Utah Transplantation Affiliated Hospitals.
A number of different classes of medication can help treat the disease, including ACE inhibitors, beta blockers and aldosterone antagonists. When those don't do enough to solve the heart's pumping problem the very definition of heart failure implantable devices such as a defibrillator or in some cases a pacemaker that synchronizes the squeezing of the left ventricle reduce the risk of death even further, Renlund says.
"Compared to pre-1985, there are lots of tools that can be used to address individual patients," Renlund says. "Regardless of where they are, the majority can be helped to live longer and better than they otherwise would have. "
The symptoms of heart disease can be problematic because they are not that unusual. Because other conditions can also lead to them, people may overlook heart failure as a cause. Renlund says one of the earliest manifestations is shortness of breath with exertion.
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