Right-sided heart failure


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Heart, front view
Heart, front view
Heart, section through the middle
Alternative Names

Congestive heart failure - right-sided


Symptoms

A variety of different situations may trigger an episode of heart failure, including:



Many people admitted to the hospital with heart failure do not follow a recommended low-salt diet or take heart failure medicines as prescribed.


Signs and tests

Your health care provider will conduct a physical examination, which may reveal:

Heart failure patients may undergo some of the following common tests:

  • An ECG, to look for signs of thickened heart muscle or enlarged heart chambers. The electric system of the heart and heart rhythm may not be normal.
  • A chest x-ray, to look for enlargement of the heart and fluid accumulation in the lungs.
  • An echocardiogram (heart ultrasound) and a Doppler study, which may show heart chambers enlargement, leaky valves, and poor pumping function.

The following lab tests may be performed:

Cardiac catheterization may be performed. In right heart catheterization, a catheter is inserted through a vein into the right side of the heart to measures the pressures. Sometimes, an injection of contrast material ("dye") in the right ventricle is necessary to help understand the problem (right ventriculography).

The left ventricle and arteries in a similar fashion.



Review Date: 11/06/2006
Reviewed By: Glenn Gandelman, MD, MPH, Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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