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Despite impressive improvements in treatment strategies, heart failure (HF) morbidity and mortality remains substantially high worldwide. Pulmonary congestion is considered the leading cause for hospital admissions and death among patients with HF. Physical examination is crucial for titrating medical treatment in these patients, but despite a good specificity it is not sensitive enough to detect early elevated cardiac filling pressures.
The N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) is a recognized powerful predictor for HF prognosis. Recently, cardiotrophin-1 and galectin-3 have been proposed as new relevant biomarkers for HF evaluation.
Echocardiography can be also used to noninvasively measure left ventricular filling pressures. Lung ultrasound (LUS) through interstitial B-line evaluation has been recently proposed as a bed-side, noninvasive tool to assess interstitial lung water. B-lines correlate with NT-proBNP and E/e' levels in patients with acute dyspnea, chronic HF or after a stress test. LUS can also identify clinically silent pulmonary edema, suggesting that it may complement clinical evaluation to improve hemodynamic profiling and treatment optimization.
Biompedance is a bedside method for total body fluid status assessment. It defines individual fluid status/compartments/overload on the basis of an individual's normal extracellular volume and body composition. Recent studies indicate that bioimpedance-derived fluid overload indices are independent predictors of mortality in renal failure patients.
To date, no study has evaluated bioimpedance performance for fluid assessment in HF patients. The investigators aim to cross-sectionally compare bioimpedance parameters with clinical evaluation, LUS, cardiac biomarkers, and echocardiographic characteristics, in a cohort of incident consecutive patients with HF. Two years patients' survival will be evaluated to propose the best evaluative algorithm and rank the various methods for prognostic significance.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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