Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction – Diagnostics

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Diagnosing heart failure with reduced ejection fraction requires a thorough evaluation that goes beyond simply measuring how well the heart pumps. Doctors rely on a combination of physical exams, blood work, imaging tests, and careful assessment of symptoms to identify this condition and distinguish it from other heart problems. Early and accurate diagnosis opens the door to treatments that can improve how patients feel and help them live longer, making proper testing a crucial first step in managing this chronic condition.

Who Should Undergo Diagnostics and When to Seek Them

If you experience certain warning signs, it’s important to talk to your doctor about testing for heart failure. The most common symptoms that should prompt you to seek medical attention include shortness of breath, especially during physical activity or when lying flat in bed. Many people also notice unusual tiredness and weakness that makes everyday tasks feel exhausting. Swelling in the ankles, legs, or abdomen is another red flag, as is sudden weight gain from fluid buildup. Some patients wake up gasping for air at night or develop a persistent cough that doesn’t seem to go away.[2]

You should consider getting evaluated if you have risk factors that increase your chances of developing heart failure. People with coronary artery disease (narrowed arteries that supply blood to the heart muscle) or a history of heart attack are at higher risk. High blood pressure, diabetes, and irregular heart rhythms like atrial fibrillation also contribute to heart failure development. Other conditions that warrant screening include cardiomyopathy (disease of the heart muscle itself), problems with heart valves such as a narrowed aortic valve or leaky mitral valve, and viral infections of the heart muscle.[1]

Your age and lifestyle choices matter too. Being older than 65 puts you at higher risk, as does smoking, using cocaine or excessive alcohol, being physically inactive, or carrying extra weight with a body mass index above 30. If you have a family history of congestive heart failure, your doctor may recommend earlier or more frequent monitoring. People who have undergone chemotherapy for cancer treatment should also stay alert, as certain cancer drugs can weaken the heart over time.[7]

⚠️ Important
Don’t ignore symptoms just because they come and go. Heart failure symptoms can range from mild to severe and may appear, disappear, and return. Having no symptoms doesn’t mean the problem has resolved—it means the condition may be temporarily stable. Unfortunately, heart failure tends to worsen over time without proper treatment, so early diagnosis gives you the best chance for effective management.

Heart failure affects more than 6 million Americans and is the leading reason people over 65 are admitted to hospitals. Among older adults with this condition, the majority have at least five other long-term health problems, and more than half experience significant disability. These numbers highlight why recognizing the need for testing early can make such a difference in quality of life and outcomes.[6]

Diagnostic Methods Used to Identify the Disease

When you visit your doctor with concerns about heart failure, the evaluation begins with a detailed conversation about your symptoms and medical history. Your healthcare provider will ask about other health conditions you have, any family history of heart problems, medications you take, and habits like smoking or alcohol use. This background information helps guide which tests to order and what to look for.[7]

The physical examination provides important clues. Your doctor will listen to your heart and lungs using a stethoscope, a handheld device that amplifies internal sounds. A whooshing sound called a murmur might indicate a valve problem. When listening to your lungs, fluid buildup can create distinctive crackling sounds. The doctor will also examine the veins in your neck to see if they appear swollen or distended, which happens when blood backs up from the heart. Checking for swelling in your legs, ankles, and belly helps assess fluid retention. These simple observations paint a picture of how well your heart is managing its workload.[12]

Blood Tests

Blood work plays a crucial role in diagnosing heart failure. One of the most important blood tests measures a specific protein produced by the heart and blood vessels called B-type natriuretic peptide or BNP. When the heart struggles to pump effectively, the level of this protein rises in the bloodstream. Elevated BNP levels can be a strong indicator that heart failure is present, making this test particularly useful at your initial presentation.[5]

Other blood tests help identify underlying diseases that might be causing or contributing to heart failure. These may check for signs of kidney problems, diabetes, thyroid disorders, or anemia. Blood tests can also reveal iron deficiency, which is important because low iron levels can worsen symptoms and quality of life in people with heart failure even when they’re not anemic.[5]

Imaging Tests

The single most valuable imaging test for evaluating heart failure is the echocardiogram. This test uses sound waves to create moving pictures of your beating heart, similar to how ultrasound works during pregnancy. It shows the size and structure of your heart chambers, how well the valves are opening and closing, and most importantly, how blood flows through your heart. The echocardiogram is completely painless and non-invasive—a technician simply places a device on your chest that sends and receives sound waves.[5]

During an echocardiogram, doctors calculate something called the ejection fraction, which is critical for diagnosing your type of heart failure. The ejection fraction measures what percentage of blood inside the left ventricle (the heart’s main pumping chamber) gets pushed out to your body with each heartbeat. Think of it like a water pump—not all the water in the pump gets expelled with each cycle, and the ejection fraction tells you how much does. A normal ejection fraction is more than 55%, meaning over half the blood in that chamber gets pumped out each time the heart contracts.[1]

You may be diagnosed with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction when this measurement is 40% or less. If your ejection fraction falls between 41% and 49%, you have heart failure with mid-range ejection fraction. There’s also a category called heart failure with improved ejection fraction, which describes patients whose pumping strength has gotten better with treatment.[1]

A chest X-ray provides additional information by showing the size of your heart and whether fluid has accumulated in your lungs. An enlarged heart or congested lungs visible on X-ray support the diagnosis of heart failure. This quick and simple test uses a small amount of radiation to create images of your chest cavity.[12]

Heart Rhythm and Electrical Tests

An electrocardiogram, often abbreviated as ECG or EKG, records the electrical signals traveling through your heart. This quick and painless test involves placing small sticky patches with wires attached to your chest, arms, and legs. The machine then captures the heart’s electrical activity and prints it out as a series of wave patterns. The ECG shows whether your heart is beating too fast, too slow, or irregularly. It can also detect signs of previous heart attacks or areas of heart muscle damage that might be contributing to heart failure.[12]

Some patients may need continuous heart monitoring over time. A Holter monitor is a portable ECG device you wear for 24 to 48 hours while going about your normal activities. An event monitor works similarly but is worn for longer periods, sometimes weeks. These devices help catch irregular heart rhythms that don’t occur during a brief office visit.[7]

Exercise and Stress Tests

Exercise tests or stress tests evaluate how your heart performs when it’s working harder. During these tests, you typically walk on a treadmill or pedal a stationary bike while your heart is monitored. The test shows how much physical activity you can tolerate before symptoms appear and helps doctors understand your exercise capacity. This information is valuable not just for diagnosis but also for planning treatment and tracking improvement over time.[12]

Additional Diagnostic Procedures

In some cases, doctors may recommend more specialized tests. Cardiac catheterization is an invasive procedure where a thin tube is threaded through blood vessels to reach the heart, allowing doctors to see blockages in coronary arteries and measure pressures inside heart chambers. Magnetic resonance imaging or MRI uses powerful magnets and radio waves to create detailed images of the heart’s structure and function, though it’s not always necessary for routine heart failure diagnosis.[7]

⚠️ Important
Getting a proper diagnosis requires combining multiple pieces of information. No single test alone confirms heart failure. Your doctor looks at the whole picture—your symptoms, physical exam findings, blood test results, ejection fraction measurement, and other imaging—to reach an accurate diagnosis. This comprehensive approach helps distinguish heart failure from other conditions that cause similar symptoms, such as lung disease or kidney problems.

Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification

Clinical trials testing new treatments for heart failure have specific entry requirements to ensure the study enrolls the right patients. While these criteria vary depending on the research question and the treatment being studied, certain diagnostic tests serve as standard screening tools across many trials.

The left ventricular ejection fraction is almost always a key qualification criterion. Most trials for reduced ejection fraction specifically enroll patients with measurements of 40% or below, though some studies may use slightly different cutoffs like 35% or 45%. An echocardiogram or other imaging test to confirm the ejection fraction is typically required within a few weeks or months before enrollment to ensure the reading is current.[3]

Blood tests measuring BNP or a related marker called NT-proBNP are frequently used as entry criteria. These tests not only help confirm the diagnosis but also indicate the severity of heart failure. Trials often require that these levels be above a certain threshold, proving that the patient has active disease. However, some studies specifically exclude patients with extremely high levels, as this might indicate the person is too sick to safely participate.[5]

Many clinical trials use classification systems to describe how severe your symptoms are. The New York Heart Association or NYHA classification divides patients into four classes based on how much physical activity they can perform before symptoms appear. Class I means you have heart failure but no limitation in physical activity. Class II indicates slight limitations—comfortable at rest but ordinary activity causes fatigue or shortness of breath. Class III means marked limitation with symptoms during less-than-ordinary activity. Class IV describes severe limitations where patients feel uncomfortable even at rest. Most trials enroll patients in classes II or III, as these individuals have clear symptoms but are stable enough to participate safely.[3]

Electrocardiograms are standard screening tools to document heart rhythm and detect abnormalities that might make someone ineligible for a particular study. For example, trials testing devices that coordinate the heart’s electrical signals may specifically enroll patients whose ECG shows a prolonged QRS duration, a measurement indicating electrical conduction delay.[3]

Blood work to check kidney and liver function is routine before clinical trial enrollment. These organs process many medications, so researchers need to know they’re working well enough to handle the study drug. Tests measuring creatinine (for kidney function) and liver enzymes help determine eligibility. Similarly, blood counts checking for anemia and electrolyte levels like potassium are standard safety checks.[5]

Some trials require additional tests depending on the intervention being studied. Research on new medications might mandate genetic testing to see if you carry certain variants that affect drug metabolism. Studies involving devices might require imaging beyond a simple echocardiogram, such as cardiac MRI or nuclear scans that show blood flow patterns in the heart muscle. Trials evaluating exercise programs often include formal exercise testing at baseline to measure your starting fitness level.

The timing of tests matters for trial qualification. Most studies require that baseline tests be performed within a specific window, often 30 to 90 days before enrollment. This ensures the information reflects your current condition, not something that might have changed. Throughout a trial, many of these same tests are repeated at scheduled intervals—perhaps every few months—to monitor how you’re responding to treatment and watch for any safety concerns.

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction

  • Study on the Effects of Semaglutide and Diet on Physical and Heart Health in Patients with Obesity and Heart Failure

    Recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Denmark
  • Study on JTT-861 for Patients with Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction

    Recruiting

    Bulgaria Czechia Poland Romania Spain
  • Study on Optimizing Treatment for Chronic Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction Using Nebivolol and a Drug Combination

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Czechia
  • Study of cardiac atrial stem cells injected into heart muscle for treating advanced heart failure in patients with prior heart attack and reduced heart function

    Not yet recruiting

    1 1
    Belgium
  • A study comparing blood levels of finerenone when taken as one 40 mg tablet versus two 20 mg tablets in healthy male participants

    Not recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Germany
  • Study on How Sacubitril/Valsartan and Enalapril Affect Lung Pressure in Patients with Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Poland
  • Study on the Effects of AZD3427 on Kidney Function in Heart Failure Patients with Kidney Issues

    Not recruiting

    1 1
    Sweden
  • Study on the Effects of Vericiguat in Patients with Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction (HFrEF) Using the CardioMEMS HF System

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Denmark
  • Study on the Safety of Starting Vericiguat at 5 mg in Patients with Chronic Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction

    Not recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated drugs:
    Hungary Italy Poland Spain Sweden
  • Study on the Safety and Effectiveness of Tovinontrine for Adults with Chronic Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction

    Not recruiting

    Investigated drugs:
    Belgium Bulgaria Czechia Germany Hungary Italy +6

References

https://myhealth.alberta.ca/Health/pages/conditions.aspx?hwid=tx4090abc

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/heart-failure/symptoms-causes/syc-20373142

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK553115/

https://www.heart.org/en/health-topics/heart-failure/what-is-heart-failure/types-of-heart-failure

https://bestpractice.bmj.com/topics/en-us/61

https://www.healthinaging.org/a-z-topic/heart-failure/basic-facts

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/17069-heart-failure-understanding-heart-failure

https://healthy.kaiserpermanente.org/health-wellness/health-encyclopedia/he.heart-failure-with-reduced-ejection-fraction-systolic-heart-failure.tx4090abc

https://www.dynamed.com/condition/heart-failure-with-reduced-ejection-fraction-hfref

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7643567/

https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2025/0800/heart-failure-reduced-ejection-fraction.html

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/heart-failure/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20373148

https://www.heart.org/en/health-topics/heart-failure/treatment-options-for-heart-failure/medications-used-to-treat-heart-failure

https://www.heart.org/en/health-topics/heart-failure/diagnosing-heart-failure/how-can-i-improve-my-low-ejection-fraction

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/17069-heart-failure-understanding-heart-failure

http://www.cardiosmart.org/topics/heart-failure/living-with-heart-failure/if-you-have-heart-failure-with-reduced-ejection-fraction

https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/heart-failure/living-with/

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8048442/

https://www.heart.org/en/health-topics/heart-failure/treatment-options-for-heart-failure/lifestyle-changes-for-heart-failure

https://www.elliothospital.org/about-us/newsroom/news/heart-failure-explained-coping-tips-your-mind-and-body

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/heart-failure/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20373148

https://medlineplus.gov/diagnostictests.html

https://www.questdiagnostics.com/

https://www.healthdirect.gov.au/diagnostic-tests

https://www.who.int/health-topics/diagnostics

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6558629/

https://www.yalemedicine.org/clinical-keywords/diagnostic-testsprocedures

https://www.health.harvard.edu/diagnostic-tests-and-medical-procedures

FAQ

Can heart failure be diagnosed with just one test?

No single test can diagnose heart failure alone. Doctors combine information from your symptoms, physical examination, blood tests, echocardiogram showing ejection fraction, and other imaging to reach a diagnosis. This comprehensive approach helps distinguish heart failure from other conditions like lung disease that cause similar symptoms.

What does an ejection fraction of 35% mean?

An ejection fraction of 35% means that only 35% of the blood in your heart’s left ventricle is pumped out with each heartbeat, compared to the normal 55% or higher. This indicates heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, meaning your heart muscle is weakened and cannot pump as forcefully as it should.

Is an echocardiogram painful or dangerous?

An echocardiogram is completely painless and safe. It uses sound waves (like ultrasound during pregnancy) to create pictures of your heart. A technician simply places a device on your chest—there are no needles, radiation, or anything inserted into your body.

How often should I have follow-up tests after being diagnosed?

After diagnosis, you should have regular contact with your care team at least every 6 months. These appointments may include discussions about symptoms, medication adjustments, and monitoring tests. Your doctor may also ask you to track certain things at home, like weighing yourself regularly to detect fluid buildup early.

What if my symptoms get worse between appointments?

Contact your GP or care team right away if your symptoms worsen or you develop new symptoms. Don’t wait for your next scheduled appointment. Changes in symptoms may signal that your condition is progressing or that your treatment needs adjustment.

🎯 Key takeaways

  • Shortness of breath, swelling in legs, and unexplained fatigue are red flags that warrant evaluation—don’t assume they’re just from aging or being out of shape
  • The echocardiogram is your most important test because it measures ejection fraction, which determines your type of heart failure and guides treatment choices
  • A simple blood test measuring BNP can help confirm heart failure and indicate how severe it is, making it valuable both for diagnosis and monitoring
  • Having risk factors like high blood pressure, diabetes, or a previous heart attack means you should be screened even without obvious symptoms
  • Clinical trials use specific diagnostic criteria like ejection fraction below 40% and particular symptom severity levels to select appropriate participants
  • Many diagnostic tests are painless and non-invasive—the echocardiogram, ECG, and chest X-ray require nothing more than lying still
  • Heart failure affects over 6 million Americans and is the top reason people over 65 are hospitalized, making accurate diagnosis critically important
  • Regular monitoring at least twice yearly helps catch changes early, allowing treatment adjustments before symptoms become severe