Published online Dec 26, 2017. doi: 10.5662/wjm.v7.i4.117
Peer-review started: March 17, 2017
First decision: May 23, 2017
Revised: June 29, 2017
Accepted: November 22, 2017
Article in press: November 22, 2017
Published online: December 26, 2017
Processing time: 290 Days and 11.8 Hours
The symptom cluster of shortness of breath (SOB) contributes significantly to the outpatient workload of cardiology services. The workup of these patients includes blood chemistry and biomarkers, imaging and functional testing of the heart and lungs. A diagnosis of diastolic heart failure is inferred through the exclusion of systolic abnormalities, a normal pulmonary function test and normal hemoglobin, coupled with diastolic abnormalities on echocardiography. Differentiating confounders such as obesity or deconditioning in a patient with diastolic abnormalities is difficult. While the most recent guidelines provide more avenues for diagnosis, such as incorporating the left atrial size, little emphasis is given to understanding left atrial function, which contributes to at least 25% of diastolic left ventricular filling; additionally, exercise stress testing to elicit symptoms and test the dynamics of diastolic parameters, especially when access to the “gold standard” invasive tests is lacking, presents clinical translational gaps. It is thus important in diastolic heart failure work up to understand left atrial mechanics and the role of exercise testing to build a comprehensive argument for the diagnosis of diastolic heart failure in a patient presenting with SOB.
Core tip: Shortness of breath is a common clinical complaint. Etiologies such as systolic heart failure, obstructive airways disease or anemia have clear and reproducible physiological changes detectable through routine diagnostic tests. Diastolic heart failure (DHF) is often a diagnosis of exclusion. In the absence of directly demonstrating an elevation of left ventricular end diastolic pressures at rest or exercise, DHF is inferred by a combination of symptoms and resting echocardiography findings. We discuss the importance of a wider consideration, e.g., left atrium function and exercise stress testing, in DHF work-up.