Understanding Your Diagnosis Quiz
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Question 1 of 5
1. Question
Children with heart failure could have which of the following symptoms?
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Question 2 of 5
2. Question
Match these types of heart failure with their definition.
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- When a person is born with heart defects—a condition impacting an estimated 1 in 100 people
- When heart muscles become enlarged, weak or thick—making it hard for the heart to contract or fill, and get blood to the rest of the body
- A group of diseases that make muscles become weak over time and can lead to cardiomyopathy
- When the wall of the heart muscle becomes inflamed due to infection—thus keeping your heart from working like it should
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Congenital Heart Disease
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Cardiomyopathy
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Muscular Dystrophy
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Myocarditis
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Question 3 of 5
3. Question
Match these types of heart failure with their definition:
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- When heart damage is caused by chemicals like chemotherapy
- When heart muscles become too thick and lead to life-threatening abnormal heart rhythms (called “arrhythmias”)
- When there is a heart with only one ventricle and poor circulation leads to heart failure
- When a transplanted heart (called a “graft”) develops heart failure over time because of chronic or recurrent rejection
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Cardiotoxicity
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Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
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Fontan Failure
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Graft Failure
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Question 4 of 5
4. Question
To diagnose heart failure, which exams and tests might your care team perform? Select all that apply.
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Question 5 of 5
5. Question
During an echocardiogram (or “echo”), your care team will calculate your ejection fraction percentage (or “EF”), which is the amount of blood pumped from the left ventricle divided by the total amount of blood in your heart. What EF % indicates reduced heart function and possible signs and symptoms of heart failure?
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