Assessing and Grading Congestion in Acute Heart Failure: A Scientific Statement from the Acute Heart Failure Committee of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology and endorsed by the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine

Mihai Gheorghiade(Northwestern University), Ferenc Folláth(University Hospital of Zurich), Piotr Ponikowski(Military Hospital), Jeffrey H. Barsuk(Northwestern University), John E. Blair(Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center), John G.F. Cleland(University of Hull), Kenneth Dickstein(Stavanger University Hospital), Mark H. Drazner(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Gregg C. Fonarow(University of California, Los Angeles), Tiny Jaarsma(University Medical Center Groningen), Guillaume Jondeau(Hôpital Bichat-Claude-Bernard), J. López Sendón(Hospital Universitario La Paz), Alexander Mebazaa(Inserm), Marco Metra(Brescia University), Markku S. Nieminen(Helsinki University Hospital), Peter S. Pang(Northwestern University), Petar Seferović(Institute for Cardiovascular Diseases of Vojvodina), Lynne W. Stevenson(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Dirk J. van Veldhuisen(Henri Poincaré Institute), Faı̈ez Zannad(Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Stefan D. Anker(Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Andrew Rhodes(St George's Hospital), John J.V. McMurray(British Heart Foundation), Gerasimos Filippatos(University General Hospital Attikon)
European Journal of Heart Failure
March 30, 2010
Cited by 736Open Access
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Abstract

Patients with acute heart failure (AHF) require urgent in-hospital treatment for relief of symptoms. The main reason for hospitalization is congestion, rather than low cardiac output. Although congestion is associated with a poor prognosis, many patients are discharged with persistent signs and symptoms of congestion and/or a high left ventricular filling pressure. Available data suggest that a pre-discharge clinical assessment of congestion is often not performed, and even when it is performed, it is not done systematically because no method to assess congestion prior to discharge has been validated. Grading congestion would be helpful for initiating and following response to therapy. We have reviewed a variety of strategies to assess congestion which should be considered in the care of patients admitted with HF. We propose a combination of available measurements of congestion. Key elements in the measurement of congestion include bedside assessment, laboratory analysis, and dynamic manoeuvres. These strategies expand by suggesting a routine assessment of congestion and a pre-discharge scoring system. A point system is used to quantify the degree of congestion. This score offers a new instrument to direct both current and investigational therapies designed to optimize volume status during and after hospitalization. In conclusion, this document reviews the available methods of evaluating congestion, provides suggestions on how to properly perform these measurements, and proposes a method to quantify the amount of congestion present.


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