Dr. Eric Strong, internal medicine physician, faculty professor and YouTuber Strong Medicine, reviews the three categories of cardiomyopathy including their etiology, physiology, treatment, and what nurses need to look out for in patients with the disease. Dr. Strong will also explain why the term “cardiomyopathy” is surprisingly misleading and misunderstood by nurses and clinicians alike.
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A disease in which the heart is not able to contract or relax well for some reason.
American Heart Association proposes the following classification of cardiomyopathies:
Currently, these terms are generally just used in academic cardiology.
Primary CM: Disease is limited only to the heart, such as familial hypertrophic CM.
Secondary CM: A systemic disease that causes CM, such as restrictive CM caused by amyloidosis in which amyloid is deposited throughout the body.
The low risk category therapies PLUS
Something has gotten into the myocardium that causes it not relax well such as
The inability of the ventricles to relax causes heart failure the preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) although in later stages progress to heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF)
Large ventricular cavity causes poor contraction (systolic dysfunction), HFrEF. Presentation will include symptoms of low CO and venous congestion (pulmonary edema, lower extremity edema).
Inpatient treatment is targeted at improving hemodynamics with diuretics, ACE inhibitors, hydralazine and nitrates.
Look for improvement with decreased edema, improved urine output and improved work of breathing.
Outpatient treatment is targeted at remodeling the heart (with neurohormal blockade), not hemodynamics (not targeting a specific BP).
Medications include beta-blockers, aldosterone antagonists (spirinaloctone) and neprilysin inhibitors (entresto)
Dr. Eric Strong, internal medicine physician, faculty professor and YouTuber Strong Medicine, reviews the three categories of cardiomyopathy including their etiology, physiology, treatment, and what nurses need to look out for in patients with the disease. Dr. Strong will also explain why the term “cardiomyopathy” is surprisingly misleading and misunderstood by nurses and clinicians alike.
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Up My Nursing Game is partnering with VCU Health Continuing Education to offer FREE continuing education credits for registered nurses. Click here to obtain nursing credit (1.00).
See the show notes at upmynursinggame.com.