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The choice of pharmacologic agents depends on the patient’s hemodynamic profile:
Warm and Dry: (CI greater than 2.2 L + PCWP less than 18 mm Hg)
- Focus on optimizing chronic oral heart failure therapies
- Initiate/uptitrate beta-blockers (e.g. carvedilol, metoprolol succinate) and ACE inhibitors or ARBs (e.g. lisinopril, losartan) as tolerated
- Add hydralazine and nitrates (e.g. isosorbide dinitrate) in African American patients
- Consider adding angiotensin receptor-neprilysin inhibitor (sacubitril/valsartan) for HFrEF if tolerated
- Continue other oral therapies (digoxin, loop diuretics) if previously prescribed
Warm and Wet: Without Flash Pulmonary Edema (CI> 2.2 L + PCWP greater than 18 mm Hg)
- Intravenous loop diuretics (furosemide 20-40 mg IV or bumetanide 1-2 mg IV)
- Double patients’ oral daily loop diuretic dose for initial IV dose
- If oral loop diuretic naive, start furosemide 40 mg IV daily or bumetanide 2 mg IV daily
- Monitor urine output, symptoms, weight loss
- Repeat doses every 2 hours as needed
- For diuretic resistance:
- Increase loop diuretic dose
- Add metolazone 2.5-10 mg oral daily
- Switch to continuous infusion loop diuretic
- Consider ultrafiltration
- Add intravenous nitroglycerin infusion if persistent symptoms, start at 5-10 mcg/min, titrate by 5-10 mcg/min every 5 minutes, max 200 mcg/min
- For hypertensive patients, sodium nitroprusside 0.3-5 mcg/kg/min IV is an alternative to nitroglycerin
Warm and Wet: Flash Pulmonary Edema (CI> 2.2 L + PCWP greater than 18 mm Hg)
A subset of warm and wet profile patients present with flash pulmonary edema, characterized by:
- Abrupt onset dyspnea and hypoxemia
- Pink, frothy sputum
- Hypertensive crisis (SBP > 180 mmHg)
- Bilateral pulmonary rales
Management should focus on rapid symptom relief:
- High dose intravenous nitroglycerin
- Options:
- Intravenous bolus of 2000 mcg every 3-5 minutes as needed
- Intravenous infusion at 100-200 mcg/min
- Titrate to relief of dyspnea and oxygenation improvement
- Wean infusion as symptoms and blood pressure improve
- Options:
- Non-invasive positive pressure ventilation
- Consider intravenous enalaprilat 0.625-1.25 mg if blood pressure remains elevated after nitroglycerin
- Cautious use of intravenous furosemide 20-40 mg to relieve fluid overload after stabilization with above measures
Cold and Dry:(CI less than 2.2 L + PCWP less than 18 mm Hg)
- Assess PCWP
- If <15 mm Hg, administer IVF
- If 15-18 mm Hg, assess for systemic hypotension
- Mean arterial pressure (MAP): 2/3 DBP + 1/3 SBP
- Cautious intravenous fluids 250-500 mL to increase preload
- Consider holding loop diuretics temporarily
- Inotropes if fluid bolus insufficient:
- Dobutamine 2-20 mcg/kg/min IV
- Milrinone 0.375-0.75 mcg/kg/min IV
- Small trials directly comparing these agents in ADHF have resulted in no difference in clinical outcomes
- Titrate to target CI > 2.2 L/min/m2 and MAP > 65 mmHg
- Add norepinephrine if MAP remains low after inotrope initiation
Cold and Wet: (CI less than 2.2 L + PCWP greater than 18 mm Hg)
- Intravenous loop diuretics as above to relieve congestion
- Inotropes as above to improve cardiac output
- Vasopressors if inotropes cause hypotension:
- Norepinephrine 0.2-1 mcg/kg/min IV
- Dopamine 2-10 mcg/kg/min IV
- Target CI > 2.2 L/min/m2, MAP > 65 mmHg, PCWP 15-18 mmHg
- Consider mechanical circulatory support if refractory
Loop Diuretics
- Furosemide, bumetanide are first-line
- Initiate with IV bolus or infusion at 1-2.5 times oral dose
- Adjust dose based on urine output, weight loss, symptoms
- Monitor electrolytes, renal function
- Overcoming Resistance
- Increase loop diuretic dose
- Add thiazide diuretic (e.g. metolazone, chlorothiazide)
- Switch to continuous infusion
- Consider ultrafiltration
Nonpharmacologic Therapies
- Sodium restriction
- Ultrafiltration for diuretic resistance
- Temporary mechanical circulatory support (MCS) for refractory ADHF
- Durable MCS or cardiac transplantation in advanced heart failure
Evaluation of Therapeutic Outcomes
- Monitor symptoms, vital signs, orthostasis, weights, electrolytes, renal function
- Assess response to intravenous therapies
- Prepare for discharge once euvolemic and stable on oral agents
- Initiate/optimize guideline-directed medical therapies prior to discharge
- Schedule prompt follow-up appointment and testing after discharge