The disease is also called heart failure. The condition results when the heart fails to pump adequate blood to body tissues. That is when the heart can’t pump with adequate force or can’t fill with enough blood. In response, the heart chambers stretch
Symptoms of Congestive Heart Failure
Causes of Congestive Heart Failure
Coronary heart disease. This condition affects coronary arteries. The artery lumen may be blocked or narrowed, compromising oxygen supply to the heart muscle, something that reduces the heart’s functional capacity, hence congestive heart failure
Cardiomyopathy. Infections, drugs and alcohol among many other things. Genetics can also lead to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The cardiomyopathy can in turn result in congestive heart failure.
Faulty heart valves. The defects of the heart valves can lead to an impairment in the control of blood flow. That can result in a heart overwork, which further complicates to congestive heart disease.
Other diseases. Diseases like myocarditis can affect the heart pumping capacity resulting in heart failure. On the same line, chronic diseases like hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism, diabetes, emphysema, amyloidosis and hemochromatosis have been associated with heart failure.
Treatment of Congestive Heart Failure
There are three approaches that are key in treating this disease condition.
The patient with heart failure can take medications, which are the mainstay of treatment of the disease. They include:
in the treatment of congestive heart failure.
Also, treating the condition without modifying lifestyle habits that could have led to the disease is futile. Individuals with congestive heart failure should eat a balanced healthy diet with less salt and free from cholesterol. Habits of smoking and drinking alcohol should cease. Similarly, patients with this disease should control their weight by doing appropriate physical exercises.