Imagine your heart and kidneys are in a tug-of-war, each one's trouble making the other worse. This is cardiorenal syndrome, and for some people, medications alone can't break the cycle. A new medical guideline looks at whether adding device-based therapies—things beyond pills—could help by tackling the specific physical problems drugs might miss.
The review, which synthesizes existing expert opinion rather than reporting new trial results, suggests these devices have shown 'potential' as extra tools. The key idea is that treatment should be driven by a person's specific 'phenotype'—the unique pattern of how their heart and kidneys are interacting, how their body holds onto salt and water, and how congested they feel.
This isn't a green light for everyone. The authors stress that using any device requires very careful, individual patient selection. Doctors need to weigh the procedural risks and figure out how to fit these tools into someone's overall care plan. The guideline offers a suggested step-by-step approach for thinking through this complex decision, framing devices as possible add-ons, not replacements, for good medication management.