Medicine:Bendopnea

From HandWiki
Bendopnea
Ed tying shoes - Copy.jpg
Bendopnea can occur in patients with heart failure when they bend over, such as when tying their shoes.
Differential diagnosisheart failure

Bendopnea is a newly described symptom, normally of heart failure, meaning shortness of breath felt when leaning forward.[1][2][3][4][5] It was introduced by Thibodeau et al. in 2014.[1][2] Patients with heart failure often experience this when bending over to tie a shoe, putting socks on, or other activities requiring bending downwards.[1][2] It has been defined as occurring within 30 seconds of bending over, but could occur in as few as 8 seconds in severe cases.[3] When a patient is in heart failure, it often means the ventricular filling pressures are high at baseline.[1][2] When said person bends forward, it causes a further increase in ventricular filling pressures that causes dyspnea, especially in patients with lower cardiac indices.[1][2]

The term "bendopnea" (meaning "bent" and "breath") was coined to be easily identifiable among patients and physicians.[3] It is analogous to the various other -pnea-suffixed words used in medicine.[citation needed]

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