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Dr Nijjer — Orthopnoea Page Preview

Symptoms — Breathlessness

Orthopnoea — When Lying Flat Steals Your Breath

Waking breathless in the night, needing to pile up pillows, or finding you can no longer lie flat — these are not just inconveniences. Orthopnoea is a cardinal symptom of heart failure and demands specialist evaluation to identify the cause, assess severity, and restore comfort and safety.

~80%
of patients with advanced
heart failure report orthopnoea
2–5L
of fluid can redistribute
to the chest on lying flat
1–3
pillow grading — a simple
clinical marker of severity
Patient experiencing breathlessness when lying flat — orthopnoea assessment

Understanding the Symptom

What Is Orthopnoea?

Orthopnoea is breathlessness that occurs specifically when lying flat, and is relieved — sometimes within minutes — by sitting upright or raising the head of the bed. The word itself comes from Greek: orthos (upright) and pnoea (breathing).

Unlike general breathlessness during exertion, orthopnoea is position-dependent. Most patients learn quickly that adding more pillows at night eases their symptoms — and cardiologists use the number of pillows as a simple, practical measure of severity.

Orthopnoea is one of the most specific symptoms of left ventricular failure and elevated filling pressures within the heart. When the left ventricle is struggling, fluid backs up into the pulmonary circulation. Lying flat accelerates this process dramatically — making expert assessment essential to understand why it is happening and to guide treatment before the condition worsens.

Clinical assessment of breathlessness lying flat

The Physiology Explained

Why Lying Flat Causes Breathlessness

In a healthy heart, lying down causes no symptoms. In a failing heart, the change in position unleashes a cascade of fluid redistribution that overwhelms the lungs in minutes.

1

Fluid Redistributes Upward

When you lie flat, gravity no longer holds fluid in the legs and abdomen. Up to 2–5 litres of interstitial fluid redistributes from the lower body into the central circulation — rapidly increasing the volume of blood returning to the heart.

2

The Left Ventricle Is Overwhelmed

In a failing left ventricle, cardiac output cannot increase sufficiently to accommodate this sudden rise in venous return. The extra blood backs up behind the ventricle, dramatically raising pressures within the pulmonary veins and lung capillaries.

3

Fluid Leaks Into the Lung Tissue

When pulmonary capillary pressure exceeds the oncotic pressure of the blood, fluid weeps into the alveolar spaces — the tiny air sacs that perform gas exchange. The lungs become waterlogged, gas exchange is impaired, and profound breathlessness results within minutes.

What Changes With Position

Flat, Propped, or Upright

Position is everything for patients with orthopnoea. Understanding how each sleeping or resting position affects symptoms helps patients manage day-to-day, and gives Dr Nijjer important clinical information about the degree of heart failure.

Lying Flat — Worst
Fully Recumbent

Maximum fluid redistribution from legs to chest. Symptoms typically develop within 2–5 minutes of lying flat.

  • Severe breathlessness within minutes
  • Sense of drowning or suffocation
  • Coughing — sometimes frothy or pink-tinged sputum in severe cases
  • Rapid shallow breathing, inability to get comfortable
Propped on Pillows — Partial Relief
Semi-Recumbent

Raising the head partially reduces venous return. The number of pillows needed is a direct measure of heart failure severity.

  • Partial relief of breathlessness
  • Mild wheeze or chest tightness may persist
  • Interrupted sleep, frequent positional adjustments
  • Waking at night — paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea if severe
Sitting Upright — Best Relief
Fully Upright

Gravity retains fluid in the legs and abdomen. Venous return to the heart decreases, reducing pulmonary congestion. Relief typically occurs within minutes.

  • Breathlessness substantially reduced or resolved
  • Many patients sleep in a chair or recliner
  • Legs may dangle to further reduce venous return
  • Relief is a key diagnostic feature distinguishing cardiac from pulmonary causes

Assessing Severity

The Pillow Grading Scale

Cardiologists have long used the number of pillows a patient needs at night as a simple, practical proxy for the severity of heart failure and pulmonary congestion. It is not merely a comfort preference — it is a clinical marker that guides investigation and treatment intensity.

One Pillow — Mild
Compensated

Slight elevation of the head at night is all that is needed. Pulmonary congestion is minimal. Heart failure may be early or well-treated.

NYHA Class II — symptoms on moderate exertion only

Two Pillows — Moderate
Decompensating

Significant elevation required. The left ventricular filling pressures are elevated and pulmonary oedema accumulates within 10–15 minutes of lying flat.

NYHA Class III — symptoms on mild exertion; warrants urgent assessment

Three Pillows — Severe
Significantly Elevated

Near-upright position required to sleep. Pulmonary congestion is substantial. Patients often report waking in a panic unable to breathe (PND).

NYHA Class III–IV — urgent optimisation of heart failure therapy needed

Cannot Lie Down — Critical
Unable to Recline

The patient sleeps in a chair or recliner. Any attempt to lie flat causes immediate severe breathlessness. Hospitalisation and intravenous therapy may be required.

NYHA Class IV — symptoms at rest; requires immediate medical attention

Note: Pillow count is a clinical guide, not a precise measure. Always interpreted alongside echocardiography, BNP levels, and clinical examination.

Understanding the Origin

What Causes Orthopnoea

Orthopnoea is not a diagnosis — it is a symptom. The most common cause is left-sided heart failure, but several other conditions produce identical symptoms and must be carefully distinguished through investigation.

Most Common Cause

Left Ventricular Failure

The left ventricle fails to pump blood forward adequately, causing pressure to build up behind it in the pulmonary circulation. This is the primary cardiac cause of orthopnoea.

  • Coronary artery disease and previous heart attacks
  • Dilated cardiomyopathy (weakened heart muscle)
  • Hypertensive heart disease — longstanding high blood pressure
  • Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) — stiff ventricle
  • Tachycardia-induced cardiomyopathy — from prolonged fast heart rates
Structural Heart Disease

Valvular Heart Disease

Diseased heart valves disrupt normal forward flow of blood, causing pressure elevation within the heart chambers and lungs — producing identical symptoms to ventricular failure.

  • Mitral regurgitation — leaking mitral valve overloads the left atrium
  • Aortic stenosis — narrowed aortic valve obstructs outflow
  • Mitral stenosis — narrowed valve impedes flow from lungs into heart
  • Aortic regurgitation — chronic volume overload of the left ventricle
  • Often identifiable by characteristic murmur on examination
Respiratory Causes

Pulmonary & Respiratory

Several lung conditions worsen when lying flat due to changes in diaphragm mechanics and airway resistance — these must be distinguished from cardiac orthopnoea, as treatment is entirely different.

  • COPD — lying flat reduces diaphragm excursion and worsens air-trapping
  • Severe asthma — positional changes alter airway resistance
  • Bilateral pleural effusions — fluid around both lungs compresses lung tissue
  • Diaphragm weakness or paralysis — exacerbated by supine position
  • Obstructive sleep apnoea — often coexists with and worsens cardiac orthopnoea
Other Causes

Other Contributing Factors

Several systemic and mechanical factors can cause or worsen positional breathlessness, sometimes co-existing with underlying cardiac disease.

  • Gross obesity — weight of abdominal and thoracic fat restricts diaphragm movement when flat
  • Large ascites (abdominal fluid) — elevates diaphragm when supine
  • Pericardial effusion — fluid around the heart restricts cardiac filling
  • Anaemia — reduces oxygen-carrying capacity, worsening breathlessness at rest
  • Pregnancy — uterine pressure on diaphragm and inferior vena cava when supine

When to Act Without Delay

Emergency Warning Signs

Orthopnoea that is new, rapidly worsening, or accompanied by any of the following features may indicate acute decompensation of heart failure — a medical emergency requiring immediate attention, not a wait-and-see approach.

Red Flag Features — Seek Urgent Medical Attention

These features suggest acute heart failure decompensation or another serious cause

Sudden severe breathlessness at restNew or rapidly worsening inability to breathe even when sitting upright — call 999. This may indicate acute pulmonary oedema.
Pink or frothy sputum when coughingA sign of fluid in the alveoli — acute cardiogenic pulmonary oedema. Requires emergency hospital treatment immediately.
Oxygen saturations below 94%If you have a home oximeter and it reads below 94% when upright and rested, seek emergency assessment without delay.
Associated chest pain or palpitationsOrthopnoea accompanied by central chest pain or fast/irregular heartbeat suggests a possible acute coronary event or arrhythmia driving decompensation.
Rapidly escalating pillow requirementIf you needed one pillow last week and now need three, your heart failure is decompensating. This warrants same-day or next-day specialist review.
Paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea (PND)Waking from sleep 1–3 hours after lying down, gasping for air, and needing to sit upright or go to a window. This is a hallmark of decompensated left heart failure.

Diagnostic Pathway

Investigations Dr Nijjer Recommends

Identifying the cause of orthopnoea requires a systematic approach. A detailed clinical history, physical examination (listening for added heart sounds, signs of fluid overload), and targeted investigations are combined to reach a precise diagnosis and guide treatment.

  • Echocardiogram The most important single test — assesses left ventricular function (ejection fraction), valve structure and function, filling pressures, and pericardial fluid. Often identifies the cause immediately. Learn More →
  • BNP / NT-proBNP Blood biomarkers released by the ventricles under pressure. Markedly elevated in heart failure — a highly sensitive screening test and a guide to treatment response. More Info →
  • Chest X-Ray Shows cardiomegaly (enlarged heart), pulmonary venous congestion, Kerley B lines, and pleural effusions — direct imaging evidence of fluid overload. More Info →
  • ECG Identifies arrhythmias driving heart failure (e.g. AF, left bundle branch block), evidence of previous myocardial infarction, or left ventricular hypertrophy from hypertension. Learn More →
  • Cardiac MRI Gold-standard assessment of myocardial viability, fibrosis, and cardiomyopathy subtype. Particularly valuable when echocardiogram findings are inconclusive or cardiomyopathy is suspected. Learn More →
  • CT Coronary Angiography Assesses for underlying coronary artery disease as a cause of ischaemic cardiomyopathy. Guides decisions about revascularisation. Learn More →
  • Pulmonary Function Spirometry and flow-volume loops help distinguish cardiac from respiratory causes of positional breathlessness — particularly important if COPD or asthma is suspected. More Info →

The Treatment Approach

Reducing Fluid & Restoring Function

Treating orthopnoea means treating the underlying cause. For most patients, this means addressing heart failure with a combination of evidence-based medications, lifestyle modification, and — where structural abnormalities are identified — interventional or surgical treatment.

Evidence-Based Medications
  • Diuretics — Furosemide or torasemide to rapidly remove excess fluid from the lungs and body
  • ACE inhibitors / ARBs — Reduce the workload on the failing ventricle and slow disease progression
  • Beta-blockers — Improve ventricular function and reduce the risk of sudden death in heart failure
  • SGLT2 inhibitors — Empagliflozin and dapagliflozin; landmark evidence for reducing hospitalisation and mortality
  • MRA (spironolactone) — Counters aldosterone-driven fluid retention and fibrosis
Device & Interventional Treatments
  • Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) — Biventricular pacemaker to coordinate the failing ventricle, improving ejection fraction
  • Implantable defibrillator (ICD) — For patients at high risk of life-threatening arrhythmia
  • Coronary angioplasty / revascularisation — If ischaemic cardiomyopathy is the underlying cause
  • Valve repair or replacement — For significant mitral or aortic valve disease driving heart failure
  • TAVI / TMVR — Catheter-based valve procedures for patients unsuitable for open surgery
Lifestyle & Self-Management
  • Fluid restriction — Typically 1.5–2 litres per day to prevent fluid overload accumulating
  • Salt reduction — Dietary sodium restriction reduces fluid retention and diuretic requirements
  • Daily weight monitoring — An increase of more than 2kg in 2 days signals fluid accumulation requiring medication adjustment
  • Elevation — Sleeping with the head of the bed elevated at 30–45° reduces symptoms immediately
  • Supervised exercise rehabilitation — Improves functional capacity, quality of life, and long-term outcomes in stable heart failure
Monitoring & Follow-Up
  • Serial BNP measurement — Tracks treatment response; a falling BNP confirms that congestion is resolving
  • Repeat echocardiography — Reassess left ventricular function, filling pressures, and valve disease after treatment
  • Optimisation of diuretic dose — Titrated against daily weight, symptoms, and renal function
  • Blood tests — U&Es and creatinine monitored regularly when on diuretics, ACE inhibitors, and MRA
  • Remote monitoring — Wearable and implantable sensors can detect rising filling pressures before decompensation occurs

Explore Further

Related Conditions & Symptoms

Find Out Why You Cannot Lie Flat

Orthopnoea is not something to simply accept or manage with more pillows. It is a signal that your heart needs expert evaluation. Dr Nijjer offers same-week consultation at 68 Harley Street, with full access to state-of-the-art cardiac imaging and on-site investigations. The right diagnosis leads to the right treatment — and a return to comfortable, restful sleep.

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0203 9838 001
68 Harley Street, London W1G 7HE