Insights into the pathogenesis of chronic heart failure: immune activation and cachexia

被引:79
作者
Anker, SD [1 ]
Rauchhaus, M [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Heart & Lung Inst, Dept Cardiac Med, London SW3 6LY, England
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00001573-199905000-00004
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Body wasting, ie, cardiac cachexia, is a complication of chronic heart failure (CHF). The authors have suggested that cardiac cachexia should be diagnosed when nonedematous weight loss of more than 7.5% of the premorbid normal weight occurs over a time period of more than 6 months. In an unselected CHF outpatient population, 16% of patients were found to be cachectic. The cachectic state is predictive of poor survival independently of age, functional class, ejection fraction, and exercise capacity. Patients with cardiac cachexia suffer from a general loss of fat, lean, and bone tissue. Cachectic CHF patients are weaker and fatigue earlier. The pathophysiologic causes of body wasting in patients with CHF remain unclear, but initial studies have suggested that humoral neuroendocrine and immunologic abnormalities may be of importance. Cachectic CHF patients show increased plasma levels of catecholamines, cortisol, and aldosterone. Several studies have shown that cardiac cachexia is linked to increased plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor a. The degree of body wasting is strongly correlated with neurohormonal and immune abnormalities. Some investigators have suggested that endotoxin may be important in triggering immune activation in CHF patients. Available studies suggest that cardiac cachexia is a multifactorial neuroendocrine and immunologic disorder that carries a poor prognosis. A complex catabolic-anabolic imbalance in different body systems may cause body wasting in patients with CHF. Curr Opin Cardiol 1999, 14:211-216 (C) 1999 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:211 / 216
页数:6
相关论文
共 62 条
  • [1] EDEMA OF CARDIAC ORIGIN - STUDIES OF BODY-WATER AND SODIUM, RENAL-FUNCTION, HEMODYNAMIC INDEXES, AND PLASMA HORMONES IN UNTREATED CONGESTIVE CARDIAC-FAILURE
    ANAND, IS
    FERRARI, R
    KALRA, GS
    WAHI, PL
    POOLEWILSON, PA
    HARRIS, PC
    [J]. CIRCULATION, 1989, 80 (02) : 299 - 305
  • [2] Anker SD, 1997, EUR HEART J, V18, P259
  • [3] Loss of bone mineral in patients with cachexia due to chronic heart failure
    Anker, SD
    Clark, AL
    Teixeira, MM
    Hellewell, PG
    Coats, AJS
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 1999, 83 (04) : 612 - 615
  • [4] Relation between serum uric acid and lower limb blood flow in patients with chronic heart failure
    Anker, SD
    Leyva, F
    PooleWilson, PA
    Kox, WJ
    Stevenson, JC
    Coats, AJS
    [J]. HEART, 1997, 78 (01) : 39 - 43
  • [5] Cardiac cachexia - A syndrome with impaired survival and immune and neuroendocrine activation
    Anker, SD
    Coats, AJS
    [J]. CHEST, 1999, 115 (03) : 836 - 847
  • [6] Tumor necrosis factor and steroid metabolism in chronic heart failure: Possible relation to muscle wasting
    Anker, SD
    Clark, AL
    Kemp, M
    Salsbury, C
    Teixeira, MM
    Hellewell, PG
    Coats, AJS
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 1997, 30 (04) : 997 - 1001
  • [7] Tumour necrosis factor alpha as a predictor of impaired peak leg blood flow in patients with chronic heart failure
    Anker, SD
    Volterrani, M
    Egerer, KR
    Felton, CV
    Kox, WJ
    Poole-Wilson, PA
    Coats, AJS
    [J]. QJM-MONTHLY JOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION OF PHYSICIANS, 1998, 91 (03): : 199 - 203
  • [8] Elevated soluble CD 14 receptors and altered cytokines in chronic heart failure
    Anker, SD
    Egerer, KR
    Volk, HD
    Kox, WJ
    PooleWilson, PA
    Coats, AJS
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 1997, 79 (10) : 1426 - &
  • [9] Wasting as independent risk factor for mortality in chronic heart failure
    Anker, SD
    Ponikowski, P
    Varney, S
    Chua, TP
    Clark, AL
    WebbPeploe, KM
    Harrington, D
    Kox, WJ
    PooleWilson, PA
    Coats, AJS
    [J]. LANCET, 1997, 349 (9058) : 1050 - 1053
  • [10] Anker SD, 1997, CIRCULATION, V96, P526