Heart failure and cerebral ischemia / Tamer Sayin, Cetin Erol
Bibliogr.: p. 107-108. - Abstr. eng. - DOI: https://doi.org/10.26430/CHUNGARICA.2021.51.2.103
In: Cardiologia Hungarica. - ISSN 0133-5595. - 2021. 51. évf. 2. sz., p. 103-108. : ill.
Heart failure patients may have impaired cerebral autoregulation and regional cerebral blood flow abnormalities. Predisposition to thromboembolic complications occur because of dilated chambers and abnormal blood flow, abnormal vessel/chamber lining and abnormal blood particles in heart failure patients. Epidemiological and clinical studies document an increased rate of thromboembolic complications in heart failure. Well known/accepted indications of oral anticoagulation therapy to prevent thromboembolic events are co-existence of atrial fibrillation/flutter, intracardiac thrombi and a history of a thromboembolic event. Other than a co-existence of coronary artery disease and heart failure, antiplatelet agents should not be used in heart failure patients to prevent ischemic stroke. How and who to treat/prevent a thromboembolic event in patients with heart failure and sinus rhythm is a hot topic. Up to date, clinical studies of treatment with oral anticoagulant agents-mainly warfarin and recently rivaroxaban vs antiplatelet agents or placebo could not meet their primary outcome related with morbidity/mortality. In some of these studies, decreased rate of ischemic strokes were offset by increased major hemorrhage. Kulcsszavak: heart failure, cerebral ischemia, stroke