Transcript Viral
E
d
Viral Myocarditis and Dilated
Cardiomyopathy
Kristine Scruggs, MD
AM Report
10 March 2010
Signs & Symptoms of Myocarditis
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Excessive fatigue
Chest pain
Unexplained sinus tachycardia
Acute pericarditis
S3, S4 or summation gallop
Abnormal electrocardiogram
Abnormal echocardiogram
New cardiomegaly on CXR
Atrial or ventricular arrhythmia
Partial or complete heart block
New onset CHF
Atypical MI
Cardiogenic shock
Sudden, unexpected death
Etiologies of DCM (Felker, et al.)
• Idiopathic (50%)
• Myocarditis (9%)
– Viral, Bacterial, Fungal,
Protozoal, Helminth
• Ischemic heart disease
(7%)
• Infiltrative disease (5%)
– Amyloidosis, Sarcoidosis,
Hemochromatosis
• Peripartum
cardiomyopathy (4%)
• Hypertension (4%)
• HIV infection (4%)
• Connective Tissue
Disease(3%)
– Scleroderma, SLE, etc
• Substance abuse (3%)
– Cocaine, EtOH
• Doxorubicin (1%)
• Other (10%)
– Restrictive CM, Familial CM,
Valvular heart dz, Endocrine,
Neuromuscular, Neoplastic,
Drugs (other), Critical
illness, etc.
Viral Etiologies of Myocarditis
• Enterovirus (e.g. Coxsackie B)*
• Adenovirus*
• Hepatitis C
• CMV
• Echovirus
• Influenza
• EBV
• Parvovirus B-19
• HHV-6
*Associated with progression to DCM (Bowles, et al.)
Diagnosis
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Serologies
Cultures
PCR (direct examination of cardiac tissue)
Incidence/prevalence of viral myocarditis difficult to assess
– No non-invasive “gold standard”
– 3.5-5% cardiac involvement during coxsackie outbreak
– 6% at autopsy of SCD in young athletes
• 149 pts w/ DCM unknown etiology, + PCR in 20% (Bowles,
et al)
– Versus 1.4% in controls
– All adenovirus (60%) and enterovirus (40%)
• 1230 pts w/ DCM, mycarditis the cause in 9% (Felker, et al.)
Pathophysiology of Viral
Myocarditis --> DCM
• Late sequela of acute or chronic viral myocarditis
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– direct viral injury (viral toxicity, perforin-mediated cell lysis,
cytokine expression)
– persistence of virus (initial immune response is protective)
– autoimmune phenomenon (“anti-heart” antibodies)
• In one study, 93% of patients with myocarditis on
biopsy had history of preceding viral illness (Bowles, et
al.)
• Initial immune response is probably protective
– Decreases inflammation
– Stronger humoral and cellular immune response linked to
less severe initial disease
Take Home Points
• Viral infection (esp. with adeno, entero) causes
myocarditis in up to 5% of cases
• In patients with newly diagnosed DCM, 9% have been
traced to viral myocarditis
• Incidence/prevalence is difficult to assess as there is no
“gold standard” for diagnosis
• Damage is caused by direct viral injury, persistent viral
infection/inflammation, and auto-immune phenomena.
• Prognosis is thought to be generally good, as only the
severe cases present with clinical findings
– Recent onset IDCM (<6 mo) showed improvement from
baseline EF 25% to 42% in one year
– Transplant free survival 92% at one year and 88% at two
years (McNamara, et al.)
Questions?
References
• Bowles NE, et al. Detection of Viruses in Myocardial
Tissues by Polymerase Chain Reaction: Evidence of
Adenovirus as a Common Cause of Myocarditis in
Children and Adults. J Am Coll of Card. 2003. 42: 3.
466-472.
• Cooper LT, et al. Etiology and Pathogenesis of
Myocarditis. UpToDate. 2009.
• Felker GM, et al. Underlying Causes and Long-term
Survival in Patients with Initially Unexplained
Cardiomyopathy. New Engl J of Med. 2000. 342: 15.
1077-1081.
• McNamara DM, et al. Controlled Trial of Intravenous
Immune Globulin in Recent-Onset Dilated
Cardiomyopathy. Circulation. 2001; 103:2254-2259.