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Mortality

Wayne State University

Cardiology

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

High Output Heart Failure, A Lethal And Forgotten Cause Of Heart Failure, Neiberg A. Lima Md, Ian Detroyer Bs, Saman Razzaq Md, Oluwale Adegbala Md, Preeti Ramappa Md Mar 2023

High Output Heart Failure, A Lethal And Forgotten Cause Of Heart Failure, Neiberg A. Lima Md, Ian Detroyer Bs, Saman Razzaq Md, Oluwale Adegbala Md, Preeti Ramappa Md

Medical Student Research Symposium

Introduction

Cardiac output (CO) is usually low or normal in patients with heart failure. However, some patients have a high CO deemed high-output heart failure (HOHF). HOHF is not well characterized and continues to be under-recognized clinically. At the Detroit VA, we conducted a quality improvement project to define the characteristics of this unique patient population, identify predictors and increase awareness of this entity.

Methods

Patients with HOHF were compared to patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and normal CO. HOHF was defined as CO >8 L/minute on right heart catheterization performed between 2008-2021. Retrospective data regarding …


National Trends In Admission And In-Hospital Mortality Of Patients With Heart Failure In The United States (2001–2014), Emmanuel Akintoye, Alexandros Briasoulis, Alexander Egbe, Shannon M. Dunlay, Sudhir Kushwaha, Diane Levine, Luis Afonso, Dariush Mozaffarian, Jarrett Weinberger Dec 2017

National Trends In Admission And In-Hospital Mortality Of Patients With Heart Failure In The United States (2001–2014), Emmanuel Akintoye, Alexandros Briasoulis, Alexander Egbe, Shannon M. Dunlay, Sudhir Kushwaha, Diane Levine, Luis Afonso, Dariush Mozaffarian, Jarrett Weinberger

Internal Medicine Faculty Publications

Background-—To investigate heart failure (HF) hospitalization trends in the United States and change in trends after publication of management guidelines.

Methods and Results-—Using data from the National Inpatient Sample and the US Census Bureau, annual national estimates in HF admissions and in-hospital mortality were estimated for years 2001 to 2014, during which an estimated 57.4 million HF-associated admissions occurred. Rates (95% confidence intervals) of admissions and in-hospital mortality among primary HF hospitalizations declined by an average annual rate of 3% (2.5%–3.5%) and 3.5% (2.9%–4.0%), respectively. Compared with 2001 to 2005, the average annual rate of decline in primary HF admissions …