Other Treatment
Biventricular pacing
Several new medical advances
benefit people with
heart failure. One is the biventricular
pacemaker, which synchronizes the rhythm of the
heart's chambers (cardiac resynchronization). It has been shown to improve
quality of life in people who have severe heart failure and problems with the
heart's electrical system.7 New guidelines from the
American Heart Association recommend biventricular pacing for people with
severe heart failure.13 Further studies are ongoing to
see whether this therapy might also benefit those with less severe heart
failure.
Implantable defibrillators (ICDs)
A device that
combines an
implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) with a
biventricular pacemaker is now available for some people with heart failure.
The ICD part of the device continuously monitors the heart for
life-threatening, rapid heart rhythms. When these dangerous heart rhythms
occur, the device delivers an electric shock to the heart to restore a normal
rhythm. The biventricular pacing part sends weak electrical shocks that make
the left and right lower chambers (ventricles) contract at the same time. This
double contraction helps the heart to pump blood better. Studies show better
quality of life, improved capacity for exercise, and longer life in people with
this combination pacemaker/ICD device compared with those who had only a
biventricular pacemaker.14
Other Treatment Choices
- Pacemakers, including biventricular pacemakers
(resynchronization therapy)
- Enhanced external
counterpulsation (EECP), a treatment sometimes used for heart failure
Cardiac rehabilitation is often recommended in the
treatment of heart failure before or after pacemaker implantation or other
surgical interventions. For more information, see the topic
Cardiac Rehabilitation.
Doctors also may
use an
intra-aortic balloon pump to stabilize a person during
sudden heart failure.
What to Think About
Complementary
or alternative therapy
No convincing evidence shows that
nutritional or certain vitamin supplements are effective for treating heart
failure.2 Some European studies from the early 1990s
suggest that the supplement coenzyme Q10 improves heart failure symptoms; more
recent studies have shown no effect.15 In any case,
coenzyme Q10 should not be a substitute for the standard treatment for heart
failure.
Hawthorn is an herbal supplement that contains
flavonoids. It dilates blood vessels to increase blood flow to the heart.
German studies have shown improvement of mild heart failure in some people who
took hawthorn. It is sometimes recommended in Europe and Asia for treatment of
heart failure.16
Talk to your doctor
about whether supplements are safe for you.