
To diagnose heart failure, your doctor will take a careful medical history, review your symptoms and perform a physical examination. Your doctor will also check to see if you have risk factors for heart failure, such as high blood pressure, coronary artery disease or diabetes.
Your doctor can listen to your lungs for signs of fluid buildup (lung congestion) and your heart for whooshing sounds (murmurs) that may suggest heart failure. The doctor may examine the veins in your neck and check for fluid buildup in your abdomen and legs.
After the physical exam, your doctor may also order some of these tests:
- Blood tests. Blood tests are done to look for signs of diseases that can affect the heart
- Chest X-ray. X-ray images can show the condition of the lungs and heart.
- Electrocardiogram (ECG). This quick and painless test records the electrical signals in the heart. It can show the timing and length of the heartbeats.
- Echocardiogram. Sound waves are used to produce images of the heart in motion. This test shows the size and structure of the heart and heart valves and blood flow through the heart. An echocardiogram can be used to measure ejection fraction, which shows how well the heart is pumping and helps classify heart failure and guides treatment.
- Stress test. Stress tests measure the health of the heart during activity. You may be asked to walk on a treadmill while attached to an ECG machine, or you may receive an IV drug that simulates the effect of exercise on the heart. Sometimes a stress test is done while wearing a mask that measures how well the heart and lungs get oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide.
- Cardiac computerized tomography (CT) scan. In a cardiac CT scan, you lie on a table inside a doughnut-shaped machine. An X-ray tube inside the machine rotates around your body and collects images of the heart and chest. Sometimes, contrast is given. Because the contrast agent could affect kidney function, talk to your doctor if you have kidney problems.
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In a cardiac MRI, you lie on a table inside a long, tubelike machine. Radio waves create images of the heart. A cardiac MRI may be done with a dye (contrast). It's important to tell your doctor about any problems with your kidneys before you receive a cardiac MRI or other MRI because contrast can cause a rare and serious complication in people who have kidney disease.
- Coronary angiogram. In this test, a thin, flexible tube (catheter) is inserted into a blood vessel, usually in the groin, and guided to the heart arteries. A dye (contrast) is injected through the catheter to make the arteries show up more clearly on an X-ray, helping the doctor spot blockages.
- Myocardial biopsy. In this test, a doctor inserts a small, flexible cord into a vein in the neck or groin, and removes very small pieces of the heart muscle for examination. This test may be done to diagnose certain types of heart muscle diseases that cause heart failure.
Results of tests to diagnose heart failure help doctors determine the cause of any signs and symptoms and decide on a treatment plan. To determine the best treatment for heart failure, doctors may classify heart failure using two systems:
Treatments
Heart failure is a chronic disease needing lifelong management. However, with treatment, signs and symptoms of heart failure can improve, and the heart sometimes becomes stronger. Doctors sometimes can correct heart failure by treating the underlying cause. For example, repairing a heart valve or controlling a fast heart rhythm may reverse heart failure. But for most people, treatment of heart failure involves a balance of the right medications and, sometimes, use of devices that help the heart beat and contract properly.