RESUMO
Patients with advanced heart failure continue to experience high morbidity and mortality despite recent progress made with the use of such drugs as beta-blockers and angiotensin-aldosterone inhibitors. Cardiac transplantation has severe limitations due to the short supply of organs and the ineligibility of most CHF patients for this therapy. Approved heart-assist devices are cumbersome and costly. Therefore, these devices are currently used mainly in tertiary care centers in a limited number of patients. CRT has been rapidly evolving as a viable and beneficial therapy that is universally applicable by percutaneous method in patients with moderate or severe heart failure. Its relative ease of use and cost-effectiveness make it an attractive option for patients with symptomatic heart failure. Therefore, more physicians are becoming aware of the low threshold for its use.