Další formáty:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{956065, author = {Felšőci, Marián and Pařenica, Jiří and Špinar, Jindřich and Vítovec, Jiří and Widimský, Petr and Linhart, Aleš and Fedorco, Marián and Málek, Filip and Číhalík, Čestmír and Miklík, Roman and Jarkovský, Jiří}, article_number = {6}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejim.2011.09.006}, keywords = {Hypertension; Blood pressure; Acute heart failure; Outcome; Mortality}, language = {eng}, issn = {0953-6205}, journal = {European Journal of Internal Medicine}, title = {Does previous hypertension affect outcome in acute heart failure?}, volume = {22}, year = {2011} }
TY - JOUR ID - 956065 AU - Felšőci, Marián - Pařenica, Jiří - Špinar, Jindřich - Vítovec, Jiří - Widimský, Petr - Linhart, Aleš - Fedorco, Marián - Málek, Filip - Číhalík, Čestmír - Miklík, Roman - Jarkovský, Jiří PY - 2011 TI - Does previous hypertension affect outcome in acute heart failure? JF - European Journal of Internal Medicine VL - 22 IS - 6 SP - 591-596 EP - 591-596 SN - 09536205 KW - Hypertension KW - Blood pressure KW - Acute heart failure KW - Outcome KW - Mortality N2 - The effect of previous long-term hypertension on mortality in acute heart failure (HF), regardless of blood pressure values, has not been well studied. Acute Heart Failure Database (AHEAD) - Czech HF registry enrolled 4153 consecutive patients with acute HF. We excluded severe forms (cardiogenic shock, pulmonary oedema, right HF) and analysed 2421 patientswith known presence or absence of previous hypertension. Demographic, clinical and laboratory profile, treatment and mortality rates were assessed and predictors of outcome were identified. Patients with previous hypertension (71.5%) were older, more of female gender, with worse prehospitalisation NYHA class, increased incidence of co-morbidities and higher left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). Although in-hospital mortality was similar in both cohorts, survival at 1, 2 and 3-year was worse in the hypertensive group. Nevertheless, hypertension was not associated with mortality in multivariate analysis and stronger predictors of outcome were identified (Pb0.05): new-onset acute HF [hazard ratio (HR) 0.62] and increased body mass index (HR 0.68) proved to have a protective role. Advanced age (HR 1.86), diabetes (HR 1.45), lower LVEF (HR 1.28) and admission blood pressure (HR 1.54), elevated serum creatinine (HR 1.63), hyponatremia (HR 1.77) and anaemia (HR 1.40) were associated with worse survival. Conclusion: Antecedent hypertension is frequent in patients with acute HF and contributes to organ and vascular impairment. However its presence has no independent influence on short- and medium-term mortality, which is influenced by other related co-morbidities. ER -
FELŠ$\backslash$H OCI, Marián, Jiří PAŘENICA, Jindřich ŠPINAR, Jiří VÍTOVEC, Petr WIDIMSKÝ, Aleš LINHART, Marián FEDORCO, Filip MÁLEK, Čestmír ČÍHALÍK, Roman MIKLÍK a Jiří JARKOVSKÝ. Does previous hypertension affect outcome in acute heart failure? \textit{European Journal of Internal Medicine}. 2011, roč.~22, č.~6, s.~591-596. ISSN~0953-6205. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejim.2011.09.006.
|