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Cheyne-Stokes respiration in patients with heart failure:
ominous sign or innocent bystander?

 
Brack T.
Swiss Med Wkly 2007;137:133–138

Review article
Peer reviewed article

 
Summary
 
Cheyne-Stokes respiration (CSR) during the day and at night is common in patients with severe heart failure. CSR harms the failing heart through recurrent sympathetic overstimulation caused by sleep disturbances and intermittent hypoxia brought about by apnoea and hypopnoea. CSR impairs patients’ quality of life and wakefulness, and probably also increases cardiac mortality in patients with heart failure. Thus, CSR should be actively sought in patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction <40%. When CSR persists despite optimal drug therapy for heart failure, non-invasive ventilation, particularly as adaptive servoventilation, and cardiac resynchronisation therapy are currently the most promising treatment options.

Department of Internal Medicine, Cantonal Hospital, Glarus, Switzerland



Copyright © 2007 EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.