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J Cardiol Cases ; 27(3): 108-112, 2023 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36910036

ABSTRACT

Chronic heart failure (HF) has various phenotypes. It is accompanied by repeated hospitalizations over a long period. Therefore, accumulating long-term observational data of patients with various backgrounds is important to establish a prediction technology for the exacerbation of HF. In a patient with chronic right-sided HF caused by cor pulmonale, heart sounds and electrocardiograms were recorded at home or our hospital twice a week for 7 months including the stable (31 days), pre-exacerbation (2 weeks just before the onset of exacerbation), and hospitalization periods and quantified as cardiac acoustic biomarkers (CABs) using AUDICOR technology (Inovise Medical, Inc., Portland, OR, USA). The relationship between the change in CABs and hospitalization events due to HF were investigated. During the pre-exacerbation period just before the onset of exacerbation of HF leading to hospitalization, inaudible changes in the third heart sound (S3) strength that were probably derived from the right heart were observed. Although the values of the fourth heart sound (S4) strength were high during the stable and pre-exacerbation period, values decreased markedly during hospitalization. These findings suggest that CABs including S3 and S4 are useful for the early detection of signs of HF exacerbation. Learning Objective: In a case of chronic right-sided heart failure, the change in the third heart sound (S3) caused by the right ventricle could be detected using cardiac acoustic biomarkers in exacerbations of heart failure. Even if S3 is inaudible by auscultation, it is possible to observe its changes using quantification technology.

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