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Lung Impedance Monitoring In Treatment of Chronic Heart Failure (LIMIT-CHF)
Heart failure is a major clinical problem that is increasing in magnitude and the cost of management of heart failure is escalating. A significant part of this cost is related to unplanned acute presentation to emergency departments and hospitalisation with worsening shortness of breath due to increased fluid content in the lungs. Many heart failure patients are already fitted with defibrillators to protect them from the risk of fast heart rhythms and sudden death and are followed up in both the heart failure clinics and defibrillator clinics. Recently some of the defibrillators fitted have been equipped with an extra function that can detect and warn of changes in the fluid content of the lungs very early even before the patient starts to complain of any shortness of breath and before any signs of fluid overload are seen clinically. However, it is not known how to deal with these warnings if they occur very early and it is not known whether a medical intervention at his stage is beneficial to prevent progression and eventual hospital admission. In the majority of cases, early warnings of this kind are ignored or this function is disabled at implantation of the device. The current study will involve patients who have already been fitted with a device with the above capability. The investigators will use the new function to guide management of these patients and compare their outcome with similar patients who are fitted with devices without it. The investigators will attempt to manage early warnings by a predetermined increase in medications in a group of patients and compare their clinical course to a similar group in whom no action is taken.
Details
| Lead sponsor | Barts & The London NHS Trust |
|---|---|
| Phase | NA |
| Status | COMPLETED |
| Enrolment | 80 |
| Start date | 2010-09 |
| Completion | 2014-12 |
Conditions
- Heart Failure
Interventions
- Preset increase in frusemide dose
- No intervention
Primary outcomes
- The number of unplanned hospitalisations or acute unscheduled care in the emergency department or heart failure clinic — 1 year
The primary study end-point will be a comparison between groups 1 and 2 regarding the ratio of the number of readmissions for heart failure to the total number of patients in each group of the two main groups over the course of the study (i.e. number of readmissions per patient)
Countries
United Kingdom