5 research outputs found
HFA of the ESC position paper on the management of LVAD-supported patients for the non-LVAD specialist healthcare provider Part 3: at the hospital and discharge
The growing population of left ventricular assist device (LVAD)-supported patients increases the probability of an LVAD- supported patient hospitalized in the internal or surgical wards with certain expected device related, and patient-device interaction complication as well as with any other comorbidities requiring hospitalization. In this third part of the trilogy on the management of LVAD-supported patients for the non-LVAD specialist healthcare provider, definitions and structured approach to the hospitalized LVAD-supported patient are presented including blood pressure assessment, medical therapy of the LVAD supported patient, and challenges related to anaesthesia and non-cardiac surgical interventions. Finally, important aspects to consider when discharging an LVAD patient home and palliative and end-of-life approaches are described
Guidance on the management of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) supported patients for the non‐ LVAD specialist healthcare provider: executive summary
Position paper[Abstract] The accepted use of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) technology as a good alternative for the treatment of patients with advanced heart failure together with the improved survival of patients on the device and the scarcity of donor hearts has significantly increased the population of LVAD supported patients. Device-related, and patient–device interaction complications impose a significant burden on the medical system exceeding the capacity of LVAD implanting centres. The probability of an LVAD supported patient presenting with medical emergency to a local ambulance team, emergency department medical team and internal or surgical wards in a non-LVAD implanting centre is increasing. The purpose of this paper is to supply the immediate tools needed by the non-LVAD specialized physician — ambulance clinicians, emergency ward physicians, general cardiologists, and internists — to comply with the medical needs of this fast-growing population of LVAD supported patients. The different issues discussed will follow the patient's pathway from the ambulance to the emergency department, and from the emergency department to the internal or surgical wards and eventually back to the general practitioner
Guidance on the management of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) supported patients for the non-LVAD specialist healthcare provider: executive summary
The accepted use of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) technology as
a good alternative for the treatment of patients with advanced heart
failure together with the improved survival of patients on the device
and the scarcity of donor hearts has significantly increased the
population of LVAD supported patients. Device-related, and
patient-device interaction complications impose a significant burden on
the medical system exceeding the capacity of LVAD implanting centres.
The probability of an LVAD supported patient presenting with medical
emergency to a local ambulance team, emergency department medical team
and internal or surgical wards in a non-LVAD implanting centre is
increasing. The purpose of this paper is to supply the immediate tools
needed by the non-LVAD specialized physician - ambulance clinicians,
emergency ward physicians, general cardiologists, and internists - to
comply with the medical needs of this fast-growing population of LVAD
supported patients. The different issues discussed will follow the
patient's pathway from the ambulance to the emergency department, and
from the emergency department to the internal or surgical wards and
eventually back to the general practitioner
HFA of the ESC position paper on the management of LVAD-supported patients for the non-LVAD specialist healthcare provider Part 3: at the hospital and discharge
The growing population of left ventricular assist device
(LVAD)-supported patients increases the probability of an LVAD-
supported patient hospitalized in the internal or surgical wards with
certain expected device related, and patient-device interaction
complication as well as with any other comorbidities requiring
hospitalization. In this third part of the trilogy on the management of
LVAD-supported patients for the non-LVAD specialist healthcare provider,
definitions and structured approach to the hospitalized LVAD-supported
patient are presented including blood pressure assessment, medical
therapy of the LVAD supported patient, and challenges related to
anaesthesia and non-cardiac surgical interventions. Finally, important
aspects to consider when discharging an LVAD patient home and palliative
and end-of-life approaches are described
Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology position paper on the management of left ventricular assist device-supported patients for the non-left ventricular assist device specialist healthcare provider: Part 2: at the emergency department
The improvement in left ventricular assist device (LVAD) technology and
scarcity of donor hearts have increased dramatically the population of
the LVAD-supported patients and the probability of those patients to
present to the emergency department with expected and non-expected
device-related and patient-device interaction complications. The ageing
of the LVAD-supported patients, mainly those supported with the
`destination therapy' indication, increases the risk for those patients
to suffer from other co-morbidities common in the older population. In
this second part of the trilogy on the management of LVAD-supported
patients for the non-LVAD specialist healthcare provider, definitions
and structured approach to the LVAD-supported patient presenting to the
emergency department with bleeding, neurological event, pump thrombosis,
chest pain, syncope, and other events are presented. The very
challenging issue of declaring death in an LVAD-supported patient, as
the circulation is artificially preserved by the device despite no other
signs of life, is also discussed in detail