Hellenic Journal of Cardiology (Sep 2016)

Myocardial inotropic reserve: An old twist that constitutes a reliable index in the modern era of heart failure

  • Fragkiskos Parthenakis,
  • Spyridon Maragkoudakis,
  • Maria Marketou,
  • Alexandros Patrianakos,
  • Evaggelos Zacharis,
  • Panos Vardas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hjc.2016.11.027
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57, no. 5
pp. 311 – 314

Abstract

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Current national and international guidelines, including those of the European Society of Cardiology, recognize that the assessment of prognosis should be a part of the standard management for patients with chronic heart failure (CHF). However, these same guidelines recognize the inherent difficulty of this process. A variety of factors contribute to this difficulty, including the varying etiology, frequent co-morbidity and, perhaps most importantly, huge inter-individual variability in the disease progression and outcome. Although CHF is chronic, it is also a condition in which significant proportions of patients experience apparently ‘sudden’ death, which almost certainly contributes to our difficulty in assessing individual patient prognosis. A useful tool for the risk stratification of heart failure patients is dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE), which determines the myocardial viability in ischemic cardiomyopathy and myocardial contractile reserve in idiopathic cardiomyopathy.

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