Literature DB >> 12763553

Postmortem cardiomegaly and echocardiographic measurements of left ventricular size and function in children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. The Prospective P2C2 HIV Multicenter Study.

Debra L Kearney1, Antonio R Perez-Atayde, Kirk A Easley, Neil E Bowles, J Timothy Bricker, Steven D Colan, Samuel Kaplan, Wyman W Lai, Steven E Lipshultz, Douglas S Moodie, George Sopko, Thomas J Starc, Jeffrey A Towbin.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiomegaly, seen postmortem in over 50% of HIV-infected children, may occur in the absence of clinical or histopathologic cardiac disease. Premortem echocardiography has also demonstrated clinical and subclinical cardiac disease, including increased left ventricular mass (LVM) and functional abnormalities. No studies have compared these echocardiographic measures of heart size and function with postmortem findings in this population. We sought to determine the postmortem prevalence, clinicopathologic relationships and importance of cardiomegaly in HIV-infected children.
METHODS: We reviewed clinical and postmortem cardiac findings in 30 HIV-infected children who were part of the Prospective P(2)C(2) HIV Study. Postmortem heart weight was compared with clinical measures of heart size and function, with cardiac pathology and with clinical measures reflecting chronic effects of HIV disease.
RESULTS: Postmortem cardiomegaly (heart weight z score >/=2) was identified in 53% of the children. Children with cardiomegaly had increased LVM, increased heart rate, more frequent clinical chronic heart disease and a higher prevalence of postmortem pericardial effusions compared to children without cardiomegaly (P</=.05). The association with LV end-diastolic dimension (LVEDD) did not reach statistical significance (P=.08). No association was found with LV posterior wall thickness (LVPWT), CD4(+) T-cell counts, HIV-1 viral load, hemoglobin, encephalopathy, myocardial histology or myocardial organisms.
CONCLUSIONS: Postmortem cardiomegaly was associated with echocardiographic measures of increased LVM. The pathogenesis appears not to be related to chronic anemia, HIV viral load, the degree of immune suppression or encephalopathy. Autonomic dysregulation, reflected by chronically increased heart rate, may be of pathoetiologic significance.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12763553     DOI: 10.1016/s1054-8807(03)00035-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiovasc Pathol        ISSN: 1054-8807            Impact factor:   2.185


  5 in total

Review 1.  Periodontitis and myocardial hypertrophy.

Authors:  Jun-Ichi Suzuki; Hiroki Sato; Makoto Kaneko; Asuka Yoshida; Norio Aoyama; Shouta Akimoto; Kouji Wakayama; Hidetoshi Kumagai; Yuichi Ikeda; Hiroshi Akazawa; Yuichi Izumi; Mitsuaki Isobe; Issei Komuro
Journal:  Hypertens Res       Date:  2016-11-10       Impact factor: 3.872

2.  Cardiac status of children infected with human immunodeficiency virus who are receiving long-term combination antiretroviral therapy: results from the Adolescent Master Protocol of the Multicenter Pediatric HIV/AIDS Cohort Study.

Authors:  Steven E Lipshultz; Paige L Williams; James D Wilkinson; Erin C Leister; Russell B Van Dyke; William T Shearer; Kenneth C Rich; Rohan Hazra; Jonathan R Kaltman; Denise L Jacobson; Laurie B Dooley; Gwendolyn B Scott; Nicole Rabideau; Steven D Colan
Journal:  JAMA Pediatr       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 16.193

3.  Infection of cardiomyocytes and induction of left ventricle dysfunction by neurovirulent polytropic murine retrovirus.

Authors:  Mohammed Khaleduzzaman; Joseph Francis; Meryll E Corbin; Elizabeth McIlwain; Marc Boudreaux; Min Du; Tim W Morgan; Karin E Peterson
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2007-09-12       Impact factor: 5.103

4.  Cardiac Effects of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy in Perinatally HIV-Infected Children: The CHAART-2 Study.

Authors:  Steven E Lipshultz; James D Wilkinson; Bruce Thompson; Irene Cheng; David A Briston; William T Shearer; E John Orav; Joslyn A Westphal; Tracie L Miller; Steven D Colan
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2017-10-31       Impact factor: 24.094

5.  Cardiac Effects of Antiretroviral-Naïve versus Antiretroviral-Exposed HIV Infection in Children.

Authors:  Nikmah S Idris; Michael M H Cheung; Diederick E Grobbee; David Burgner; Nia Kurniati; Cuno S P M Uiterwaal
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-01-20       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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