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Heart Failure in the Child and Young Adult: From Bench to Bedside
combines multiple etiologies for pediatric heart failure, including
congenital heart disease, cardiomyopathies, infectious diseases and
metabolic abnormalities. This comprehensive resource combines
research from multiple contributors with current guidelines to
bridge the knowledge gap for the recognition and management of
heart failure in children. Coverage begins with the basic science
of heart failure, then progresses through diagnosis, management,
treatment and surgery, finally concluding with advanced special
topics, including genetics, self-management and nanomedicine.
Cardioskeletal Myopathies in Children and Young Adults focuses on
plaques that kill people in their 40's-50's and the way they start
to form in young adulthood. The Annals of Family Medicine report
that approximately half of young adults have at least one
cardiovascular disease risk factor (Mar 2010), and an increase in
cardiovascular mortality rates in young adults was substantiated in
a study at Northwestern Medicine (Nov 2011). Given the increasing
recognition of genetic triggers behind all types of cardiovascular
disease, and the growing population of young adults with primary or
acquired myocardial disease, the need has arisen for a reference
that offers a comprehensive approach to the understanding of basic,
translational, and clinical aspects of specific muscle diseases
while making the link between young adult and adult health.
Growing numbers of children with heart failure are reaching
adulthood because of successful medical and surgical treatments and
improved outcomes of congenital heart surgery. A greater
understanding of the causes of heart failure in childhood may help
cardiologists to develop therapeutic strategies for these children
when they become adults. Also, given the recent explosion of
research in cardiogenetics, it's possible that discoveries in the
field of pediatric cardiovascular disease may also benefit adults
with heart failure.? For these reasons, heart failure specialists
need to be updated about pediatric heart failure.
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