Invasive ventilation and association with outcomes in heart failure-related cardiogenic shock - Takeaways - MDSpire

Invasive ventilation and association with outcomes in heart failure-related cardiogenic shock

  • By

  • Lisa Besch

  • Caroline Kellner

  • Jonas Sundermeyer

  • Benedikt N. Beer

  • Angela Dettling

  • Marvin Kriz

  • Carsten Skurk

  • Peter Lüdike

  • Tienush Rassaf

  • Stefan Kluge

  • Holger Thiele

  • Alastair Proudfoot

  • Tobias Graf

  • Enzo Lüsebrink

  • Paulus Kirchhof

  • Stefan Blankenberg

  • Benedikt Schrage

  • June 15, 2026

  • 0 min

Share

  • 1

    Invasive ventilation is often required for patients with cardiogenic shock due to various indications including respiratory distress and neurological impairment.

  • 2

    Patients with cardiogenic shock have high mortality rates and prolonged hospital stays, which are further exacerbated by the use of invasive ventilation.

  • 3

    The study included 1010 patients with heart failure-related cardiogenic shock, with 659 patients receiving invasive ventilation.

  • 4

    ICU stay was significantly longer for patients with invasive ventilation, averaging 2.87 days more than those without it.

  • 5

    Patients with severe respiratory failure had the longest ICU stays, with an increase of 3.83 days compared to those not receiving invasive ventilation.

Original Source(s)

Related Content