Despite significant progress in the field of therapy and management, chronic heart failure (CHF) still remains one of the most common causes of morbidity and mortality, especially among the elderly in Western countries. In particular, frequent episodes of decompensation and, consequently, repeated hospitalizations represent an unsustainable burden for national health systems and the cause of worsening quality of life. CHF is more prevalent in elderly women, who often have "peculiar" clinical characteristics and a more preserved ejection fraction caused by endothelial dysfunction and micro-vessel damage. At the moment, noninvasive technologies that are able to remotely monitor these patients are not widely available yet, and clinical trials are underway to evaluate invasive remote sensors. Unfortunately, implantable devices for identifying decompensation are not the most practical solution in the majority of of patients with chronic heart failure. In particular, they are hypothesized to have the possibility of monitoring patients by pro-B-type natriuretic peptide, ventricular repolarization variability, and bioimpedance cardiography at the first point of care, but new technology and clinical trials must be planned to address the development and spread of these emergent possibilities.
Keywords: ECG markers; bioimpedance; heart failure; prognosis; repolarization; sex/gender peculiarities.
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