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myocarditis

 
Medical Encyclopedia: Myocarditis

Definition

Myocarditis is an inflammatory disease of the heart muscle (myocardium) that can result from a variety of causes. While most cases are produced by a viral infection, an inflammation of the heart muscle may also be instigated by toxins, drugs, and hypersensitive immune reactions. Myocarditis is a rare but serious condition that affects both males and females of any age.

Description

Most cases of myocarditis in the United States originate from a virus, and the disease may remain undiagnosed by doctors due to its general lack of initial symptoms. The disease may also present itself as an acute, catastrophic illness that requires immediate treatment. Although the inflammation or degeneration of the heart muscle that myocarditis causes may be fatal, this disease often goes undetected. It may also disguise itself as ischemic, valvular, or hypertensive heart disease.

An inflammation of the heart muscle may occur as an isolated disorder or be the dominating feature of a systemic disease (one that affects the whole body, like systemic lupus erythematosus).

— Beth A. Kapes



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Dictionary: my·o·car·di·tis   ('ō-kär-dī'tĭs) pronunciation
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n.
Inflammation of the myocardium.


Food and Fitness: myocarditis
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Inflammation of the middle, muscular lining of the heart caused by a bacterial or viral infection. The immediate effects of the inflammation can be serious and may lead to heart failure, but full recovery is possible. The risk of contracting myocarditis during a viral infection, such as a cold, increases if you continue strenuous physical exertion. In the past, exercising during a bout of myocarditis was believed to be very dangerous and an important factor in the cause of sudden exercise-related deaths. Recent studies suggest that sudden cardiac death during the presence of viral myocarditis is a rare event. Nevertheless, it would be very foolish for anyone to test the latest opinion by exercising during a fever.

Inflammation of the muscular wall of the heart caused by a viral or bacterial infection. The risk of having myocarditis increases if the body is subjected to physical exertion when a viral infection is present. Physical activity should be resumed only after complete recovery from myocarditis, and even then exercise should be gradual and under medical supervision.

Veterinary Dictionary: myocarditis
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Inflammation of the muscular walls of the heart (the myocardium). The condition may result from bacterial or viral infections or it may be a toxic inflammation caused by drugs or toxins from infectious agents. A striking example is the myocarditis of foot-and-mouth disease. The effect is to reduce cardiac reserve, possibly to the point of precipitating heart failure. Focal lesions may cause cardiac arrhythmia.

  • fibrotic m. — healed lesion with much myocardium replaced by scar tissue; cardiac function will be severely compromised.
  • infectious myocarditis — see goose hepatitis.
  • primary m. — usually the result of a primary viral or protozoal infection of the myocardium.
  • secondary m. — associated with an infectious or noninfectious systemic disease or associated with another cardiovascular disorder.
Wikipedia: Myocarditis
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Myocarditis
Classification and external resources

Histopathological image of viral myocarditis at autopsy in a patient with acute onset of congestive heart failure. Viral etiology, however, failed to be determined in postmortem serological study.
ICD-10 I09.0, I51.4
ICD-9 391.2, 422, 429.0
DiseasesDB 8716
MedlinePlus 000149
eMedicine med/1569 emerg/326
MeSH D009205

In medicine (cardiology), myocarditis is inflammation of heart muscle (myocardium). It resembles a heart attack but coronary arteries are not blocked.

Myocarditis is most often due to infection by common viruses, such as parvovirus B19, less commonly non-viral pathogens such as Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease) or Trypanosoma cruzi, or as a hypersensitivity response to drugs.[1]

The definition of myocarditis varies, but the central feature is an infection of the heart, with an inflammatory infiltrate, and damage to the heart muscle, without the blockage of coronary arteries that define a heart attack (myocardial infarction) or other common non-infectious causes. [2] Myocarditis may or may not include death (necrosis) of heart tissue. It may include dilated cardiomyopathy.[1]

Myocarditis is often an autoimmune reaction. Streptococcal M protein and coxsackievirus B have regions (epitopes) that are immunologically similar to cardiac myosin. After the virus is gone, the immune system may attack cardiac myosin.[1]

Because a definitive diagnosis requires a heart biopsy, which doctors are reluctant to do because they are invasive, statistics on the incidence of myocarditis vary widely.[1]

The consequences of myocarditis vary widely. It can cause a mild disease without any symptoms that resolves itself, or it may cause chest pain, heart failure, or sudden death. An acute myocardial infarction-like syndrome with normal coronary arteries has a good prognosis. Heart failure, even with dilated left ventricle, may have a good prognosis. Ventricular arrhythmias and high-degree heart block have a poor prognosis. Loss of right ventricular function is a strong predictor of death.[1]

Contents

Signs and symptoms

The signs and symptoms associated with myocarditis are varied, and relate either to the actual inflammation of the myocardium, or the weakness of the heart muscle that is secondary to the inflammation. Signs and symptoms of myocarditis include:[3]

  • Chest pain (often described as "stabbing" in character)
  • Congestive heart failure (leading to edema, breathlessness and hepatic congestion)
  • Palpitations (due to arrhythmias)
  • Sudden death (in young adults, myocarditis causes up to 20% of all cases of sudden death)[4]
  • Fever (especially when infectious, e.g. in rheumatic fever)
  • Symptoms in infants and toddlers tend to be more non-specific with generalized malaise, poor appetite, abdominal pain, chronic cough. Later stages of the illness will present with respiratory symptoms with increased work of breathing and is often mistaken for asthma.

Since myocarditis is often due to a viral illness, many patients give a history of symptoms consistent with a recent viral infection, including fever, rash, diarrhea, joint pains, and easy fatigueability.

Myocarditis is often associated with pericarditis, and many patients present with signs and symptoms that suggest concurrent myocarditis and pericarditis.

Diagnosis

Endomyocardial biopsy specimen. Extensive eosinophilic infiltrate involving the endocardium and myocardium (hematoxylin and eosin stain).

Myocarditis refers to an underlying process that causes inflammation and injury of the heart. It does not refer to inflammation of the heart as a consequence of some other insult. Many secondary causes, such as a heart attack, can lead to inflammation of the myocardium and therefore the diagnosis of myocarditis can not be made by evidence of inflammation of the myocardium alone.[5]

Myocardial inflammation can be suspected on the basis of electrocardiographic results (ECG), elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) and/or Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and increased IgM (serology) against viruses known to affect the myocardium. Markers of myocardial damage (troponin or creatine kinase cardiac isoenzymes) are elevated.[3]

The electrocardiogram (ECG) findings most commonly seen in myocarditis are diffuse T wave inversions; saddle-shaped ST-segment elevations may be present (these are also seen in pericarditis).[3]

The gold standard is still biopsy of the myocardium, generally done in the setting of angiography. A small tissue sample of the endocardium and myocardium is taken, and investigated by a pathologist by light microscopy and—if necessary—immunochemistry and special staining methods. Histopathological features are: myocardial interstitium with abundant edema and inflammatory infiltrate, rich in lymphocytes and macrophages. Focal destruction of myocytes explains the myocardial pump failure.[3]

Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (cMRI or CMR) has been shown to be very useful in diagnosing myocarditis by visualizing markers for inflammation of the myocardium.[6] Recently, consensus criteria for the diagnosis of myocarditis by CMR have been published [7]

Causes

A large number of causes of myocarditis have been identified, but often a cause cannot be found. In Europe and North America, viruses are common culprits. Worldwide, however, the most common cause is Chagas' disease, an illness endemic to Central and South America that is due to infection by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi.[3]

Infections

Bacterial myocarditis is rare in patients without immunodeficiency.

Toxins

Immunologic Reactions

Physical agents

Epidemiology

The exact incidence of myocarditis is unknown. However, in series of routine autopsies, 1–9% of all patients had evidence of myocardial inflammation. In young adults, up to 20% of all cases of sudden death are due to myocarditis.[3]

Among patients with HIV, myocarditis is the most common cardiac pathological finding at autopsy, with prevalence of 50% or more. [1]

Therapy

As most viral infections cannot be treated with directed therapy, symptomatic treatment is the only form of therapy for those forms of myocarditis. In the acute phase, supportive therapy including bed rest is indicated. For symptomatic patients, digoxin and diuretics provide clinical improvement. For patients with moderate to severe dysfunction, cardiac function can be supported by use of inotropes such as Milrinone in acute phase followed by oral therapy with ACE inhibitors (Captopril, Lisinopril) when tolerated. Patients who do not respond to conventional therapy are candidates for bridge therapy with left ventricular assist devices (LVADs). Heart transplantation is reserved for patients who fail to improve with conventional therapy.

Famous deaths

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Leslie T. Cooper, Jr., (April 9, 2009) Myocarditis, N. Engl. J. Med. 360(15):1526-38
  2. ^ Kenneth L. Baughman, Special Report: Diagnosis of Myocarditis; Death of Dallas Criteria. Circulation. 2006;113:593-595 [Free full text]]
  3. ^ a b c d e f Feldman AM, McNamara D (November 2000). "Myocarditis". N. Engl. J. Med. 343 (19): 1388–98. doi:10.1056/NEJM200011093431908. PMID 11070105. 
  4. ^ Eckart RE, Scoville SL, Campbell CL, et al. (December 2004). "Sudden death in young adults: a 25-year review of autopsies in military recruits". Ann. Intern. Med. 141 (11): 829–34. PMID 15583223. http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/141/11/829. 
  5. ^ Kumar, Vinay; Abbas, Abul K.; Fausto, Nelson; & Mitchell, Richard N. (2007). Robbins Basic Pathology (8th ed.). Saunders Elsevier. pp. 414-416 ISBN 978-1-4160-2973-1
  6. ^ Skouri HN, Dec GW, Friedrich MG, Cooper LT (2006). "Noninvasive imaging in myocarditis". J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 48 (10): 2085–93. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2006.08.017. PMID 17112998. 
  7. ^ Friedrich MG, Sechtem U, Schulz-Menger J, Holmvang G, Alakija P, Cooper LT, White JA, Abdel-Aty H, Gutberlet M, Prasad S, Aletras AH, Laissy JP, Paterson I, Filipchuk NG, Kumar A, Pauschinger M, Liu P (2009). "Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance in Myocarditis: A JACC White Paper". J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 53 (17): 1475–87. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2009.02.007. PMID 07351097. 

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