Heart Failure Treatment: Medication, Lifestyle Changes, and More

Always consult your healthcare provider to discuss a plan that best suits you and your needs before starting a treatment or combining treatments.
Medication
Medication Directly Addressing Ejection Fraction
Medications for Widening Blood Vessels
- captopril (Capoten)
- enalapril (Vasotec)
- fosinopril (Monopril)
- lisinopril (Prinivil, Zestril, and others)
- hydralazine (Apresoline)
- isosorbide dinitrate (Isordil, Sorbitrate, and others)
Medications for Reducing Blood Pressure
- candesartan (Atacand)
- losartan (Cozaar or Arbli)
- valsartan (Diovan)
- bisoprolol (Zebeta)
- carvedilol (Coreg)
- carvedilol phosphate (Coreg CR)
- labetalol (Trandate)
Medications for Lowering Blood Sugar
- dapagliflozin (Farxiga)
- empagliflozin (Jardiance)
- sotagliflozin (Inpefa)
Diuretics
- spironolactone (Aldactone)
- eplerenone (Inspra)
Additional Medications
There are also medications and dietary supplements that don’t treat heart failure itself but support its overall management.
- Digoxin (Digitex, Lanoxin, and others) This medication is used in some cases to treat abnormal heart rhythms (arrhythmias).
- Statins These cholesterol-lowering drugs are often prescribed for the primary and secondary and primary prevention of coronary artery disease.
- Supplements Because magnesium and potassium can be lost when taking diuretics, your doctor may suggest a dietary supplement to maintain healthy levels.
Surgery
While surgery isn't often used to treat heart failure, it may be recommended if your condition can't be helped with medication or dietary and lifestyle changes, or if your doctor believes that’s the only way to treat your condition. For example, surgery may be recommended if you have a diseased heart valve or a blocked coronary artery.
“One of the causes of heart failure is ischemia,” said Robert P. Davis, MD, assistant professor of cardiac surgery at Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut. “Opening up blood vessels with angioplasty technique or coronary artery bypass surgery is a treatment option for people with heart failure. Sometimes, if you reverse the ischemia, this can relieve their heart failure symptoms.”
Angioplasty
During angioplasty, a catheter with a small balloon-like device is threaded through a vein and opened once it reaches the clogged artery. Then a small wire tube (called a stent) may be placed into the artery to keep it open. There is a slight risk of damage to the artery during this procedure, but angioplasty usually improves the condition.
Coronary Bypass
Coronary bypass surgery is one of the most common types of heart surgery that is performed, according to Dr. Davis. Some more serious cases of heart failure may qualify a patient for heart valve replacement or, in extreme cases, a heart transplant.
Valve Replacement
The surgery involves the patient being connected to a heart-lung machine while the bad valve is removed or replaced.
Heart Transplant
A heart transplant is for the most dire circumstances. “We refer to this as end-stage heart failure,” said Davis. “We've exhausted all treatment options.”
During a heart transplant, the surgeon connects you to a heart-lung machine, which takes over the functions of the heart and lungs while the damaged heart is replaced with a healthy one taken from a donor. Then the major blood vessels are reconnected, and the new heart begins working.
Devices and Implants
- Biventricular Pacing Also known as cardiac resynchronization therapy, this pacemaker enables the ventricles to contract more normally and in synchrony.
- Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (ICD) This surgically placed device is used in some people who have severe heart failure or serious arrhythmias. The device delivers an electric counter-shock to the heart when a life-threatening abnormal rhythm is detected.
- Left Ventricular Assist Devices (LVADs) These battery-operated, pump-like devices are surgically implanted to help maintain the pumping ability of the heart.
Lifestyle Changes
Making healthier lifestyle choices is often recommended for heart health.
- Walk a moderate pace for about 5–10 minutes, slowly increasing each day until you walk 30–45 minutes.
- Rest when needed, but try not to lie down when you’re finished working out.
- If you don’t like walking, other aerobic activities like cycling, swimming, or rowing are good alternatives.
- Stop your exercise and notify your doctor if you have excessive shortness of breath, a rapid heart rate that doesn’t resolve after 15 minutes of rest, dizziness, or chest discomfort.
- Avoid or limit alcohol
- Avoid or limit caffeine
- Check your legs, ankles, and feet for swelling daily
- Eat a heart-healthy diet (and reduce sodium intake)
- Get adequate rest and sleep
- Join a support group
- Monitor and control high blood pressure
- Quit smoking
- Reduce stress
- Stay up to date on recommended vaccinations
- Track (and potentially limit) your fluid intake
Complementary and Integrative Approaches
Clinical evidence supporting the use of complementary and integrative approaches in the treatment of heart failure is both limited and controversial.
Pain Management
Mental Health Treatment
Living with a chronic health condition like heart failure is challenging. It can lead to feelings of anxiety, depression, fear, and stress.
The Takeaway
- Heart failure treatment primarily focuses on improving quality and length of life as well as easing symptoms, based on the individual and their condition.
- A wide variety of medications are employed to treat heart failure, including ACE inhibitors and vasodilators for widening blood vessels, ARBs and beta-blockers for reducing blood pressure, diuretics for fluid reduction, and newer drugs, like finerenone and SGLT2 inhibitors.
- Comprehensive management requires significant lifestyle changes, such as adhering to the DASH diet, achieving a healthy weight through regular exercise, quitting smoking, limiting alcohol, monitoring fluid intake, and reducing stress.
- If medication and lifestyle changes aren’t enough, treatment may involve surgical interventions, like angioplasty, coronary bypass, valve replacement, the use of implanted devices, or a heart transplant for end-stage cases.
Resources We Trust
- Cleveland Clinic: Living With Heart Failure
- Mayo Clinic: Do I Need a Heart Failure Action Plan?
- American Heart Association: Living With Heart Failure and Managing Advanced HF
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: About Heart Failure
- Harvard Health Publishing: 5 Warning Signs and Symptoms of Early Heart Failure
- About Heart Failure. Centers for Disease Control. May 15, 2024.
- Heart Failure Signs and Symptoms. American Heart Association. May 29, 2025.
- Ejection Fraction: What It Is, Types and Normal Range. Cleveland Clinic. July 7, 2022.
- Medications Used to Treat Heart Failure. American Heart Association. June 17, 2025.
- U.S. FDA Approves Kerendia (finerenone) to Treat Patients With Heart Failure with Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction ≥40% Following Priority Review. Bayer. July 14, 2025.
- Solomon SD et al. Finerenone in Heart Failure with Mildly Reduced or Preserved Ejection Fraction. New England Journal of Medicine. September 1, 2024.
- Hydralazine Tablets. Cleveland Clinic.
- Isosorbide Dinitrate Tablets. Cleveland Clinic.
- ARNI to Treat Heart Failure. Cleveland Clinic. July 29, 2022.
- Samad M et al. Natriuretic Peptides as Biomarkers: Narrative Review and Considerations in Cardiovascular and Respiratory Dysfunctions. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. March 31, 2023.
- Tomasoni D et al. Sodium–Glucose Co‐Transporter 2 Inhibitors as an Early, First‐Line Therapy in Patients With Heart Failure and Reduced Ejection Fraction. European Journal of Heart Failure. January 17, 2022.
- Digoxin. Cleveland Clinic. April 14, 2023.
- Sizar O et al. Statin Medications. StatPearls. February 29, 2024.
- Devices and Surgical Procedures to Treat Heart Failure. American Heart Association. June 17, 2025.
- Wickman BE et al. Dietary Management of Heart Failure: DASH Diet and Precision Nutrition Perspectives. Nutrients. December 10, 2021.
- Obesity Plus Heart Failure: What Are Safe and Effective Weight Loss Strategies? Cleveland Clinic. October 29, 2024.
- Exercise May Heal the Heart As Well As Prevent Future Problems. Harvard Health Publishing. January 1, 2022.
- Ahn HJ et al. Association Between Exercise Habits and Stroke, Heart Failure, and Mortality in Korean Patients With Incident Atrial Fibrillation: A Nationwide Population-Based Cohort Study. PLoS One. June 8, 2021.
- Heart Failure: Exercise and Activity. Cleveland Clinic.
- Lifestyle Changes for Heart Failure. American Heart Association. June 16, 2025.
- Chow SL et al. Complementary and Alternative Medicines in the Management of Heart Failure: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Circulation. December 8, 2022.
- Congestive Heart Failure. Cleveland Clinic. March 10, 2023.
- Angina (Chest Pain). American Heart Association. January 30, 2025.
- About Heart Disease and Mental Health. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. May 15, 2024.

Chung Yoon, MD
Medical Reviewer

Zuri White-Gibson
Author
Zuri White-Gibson (she/her) is a lover of words, community, and accessible healthcare resources.
In addition to Everyday Health, you can find some of her work — often focusing on the intersections of health, mental wellness, gender and sexuality, and Black communities — at some of your favorite health and news sites, including Healthline, Psych Central, Prism, and Stacker.