Background and Aim Heart failure in children differs substantially from the adult population. Clinical characteristics of pediatric diastolic heart failure has rarely been reported. In this study, we aimed to… Click to show full abstract
Background and Aim Heart failure in children differs substantially from the adult population. Clinical characteristics of pediatric diastolic heart failure has rarely been reported. In this study, we aimed to summary the causes, clinical features, lab tests, and treatment effect of pediatric diastolic heart failure. Methods This study was a single center, retrospective study conducted in Children’s Hospital of Chongqing Medical University. Children who were diagnosed with diastolic heart failure (DHF) without systolic heart failure (SHF) between 2006 and 2014 were included. Meanwhile, SHF (without DHF) cases were also collected from 2013 to 2014. Results A total of 421 DHF and 42 SHF cases were included. The average age of pediatric DHF was 1.89 ± 3.29 years old, significant younger than that of SHF (4.65 ± 4.90). The top three cardiovascular causes of DHF were complex congenital heart malformations (53.4%), simple congenital heart defect (15.7%), and cardiomyopathy (7.4%). Alternatively, number of cardiomyopathy cases (57.1%) ranked first in SHF group. Simple congenital heart diseases (CHDs) rarely caused SHF. The most common symptom and sign were tachypnea and hepatomegaly in pediatric HF. Symptoms like cyanosis, feeding difficulty, be fidgety, pale, fatigue, and edema were valuable in differential diagnosis of DHF and SHF in children. B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) increase was found in 36.9% of DHF children, and 60% in SHF patients. Sensitivity of BNP greater than 100 pg/ml in diagnosis of DHF was 0.37, and specificity of it was 0.86. Diastolic function indicators, such as E/A (early wave/late wave) ratio, IVRT (isovolumic relaxation time) were significant recovered after treatment in DHF patients. Less therapeutic benefits were achieved in children with cardiomyopathy induced DHF, in compared with non-cardiomyopathy patients. Conclusion Pediatric DHF and SHF were largely different in primary causes, clinical symptoms and signs and short-term prognosis. There was a limit diagnostic value of BNP with 100 pg/ml as cut-off value in pediatric DHF. Larger, multicenter studies of pediatric DHF are required in the future.
               
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