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Frailty, sarcopenia and cachexia in heart failure patients: Different clinical entities of the same painting

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 1-10

Publisher

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC
DOI: 10.4330/wjc.v13.i1.1

Keywords

Heart failure; Sarcopenia; Cachexia; Frailty; Terapheutic implication; Comorbidities

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Heart failure in elderly patients is a systemic syndrome where advanced age, comorbidities, frailty, and impaired cognition significantly impact outcomes. Cardiac cachexia, sarcopenia, and frailty often coexist in these patients and need to be addressed to improve quality of life and reduce rehospitalization rates. Treatment strategies focus on increasing muscle mass and strength, along with utilizing common HF drugs and physical exercise programs.
Heart Failure (HF) in elderly patients is a systemic syndrome where advanced age, comorbidities with organ system deterioration, frailty and impaired cognition significantly impact outcome. Cardiac cachexia, sarcopenia and frailty despite overlap in definitions are different clinical entities that frequently coexist in HF patients. However, these co-factors often remain unaddressed, resulting in poor quality-of-life, prolonged physical disability and exercise intolerance and finally with higher rehospitalization rates and mortality. Strategy aim to increase muscle mass and muscle strength and delay the occurrence of frailty state appear essential in this regard. Common HF drugs therapy (b-blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors) and prescription of physical exercise program remain the cornerstone of therapeutic approach in HF patients with new promising data regarding nutritional supplementation. However, the treatment of all these conditions still remain debated and only a profound knowledge of the specific mechanisms and patterns of disease progression will allow to use the appropriate therapy in a given clinical setting. For all these reasons we briefly review current knowledge on frailty, sarcopenia and cachexia in HF patients with the attempt to define clinically significant degrees of multiorgan dysfunction, specific red alert thresholds in clinical practice and therapeutic approach.

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