Literature DB >> 16153464

Diagnosis and presentation of fatal myocarditis.

Ville Kytö1, Pekka Saukko, Eberhard Lignitz, Günther Schwesinger, Véronique Henn, Antti Saraste, Liisa-Maria Voipio-Pulkki.   

Abstract

The clinical presentation of myocarditis is highly variable, and histopathology is thus considered to be the cornerstone of diagnosis. We studied how accurately myocarditis was diagnosed in a series of routine autopsies and how fatal myocarditis presents clinically. All death certificates with myocarditis recorded as the underlying cause of death in Finland in 1970 to 1998 were collected retrospectively (N = 639). All cases with cardiac autopsy samples and clinical data available (n = 142; median age, 51 years) were included in this study. The cardiac samples were reexamined for the presence of myocarditis by 3 experienced independent pathologists using the Dallas criteria. The clinical data were evaluated for the presenting signs and symptoms of myocarditis. Histopathologic reanalysis showed that only 32% of the 142 subjects met the Dallas criteria for myocarditis (75% of pediatric and 28% of adult patients, P = .001). Clinicians had suspected myocarditis in only one third of the hospitalized Dallas-positive patients. Dallas-positive patients presented more often with features of myocardial infarction (26% versus 9%, P = .026) or heart failure (35% versus 10%, P = .001) than Dallas-negative subjects. The signs and symptoms of infectious disease were also more common in Dallas-positive patients (61% versus 23%, P < .001). In contrast, Dallas-negative subjects died suddenly or were found dead more frequently (68% versus 39%, P = .004). The most evident cause of death in the Dallas-negative subjects was ischemic heart disease (n = 78, 55% of all cases). Our study provides evidence that myocarditis is overdiagnosed on routine autopsies, particularly in patients who have died suddenly or are found dead. Fatal myocarditis appears to present equally often as heart failure, sudden death, or mimicking myocardial infarction.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16153464     DOI: 10.1016/j.humpath.2005.07.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Pathol        ISSN: 0046-8177            Impact factor:   3.466


  10 in total

Review 1.  COVID-19-Associated Myocarditis: An Evolving Concern in Cardiology and Beyond.

Authors:  Meg Fraser; Arianne Clare C Agdamag; Valmiki R Maharaj; Melinda Mutschler; Victoria Charpentier; Mohammed Chowdhury; Tamas Alexy
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-28

2.  Acute myocarditis after massive phenelzine overdose.

Authors:  W Stephen Waring; William A H Wallace
Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2007-09-07       Impact factor: 2.953

3.  Sudden death related myocarditis: a study of 56 cases.

Authors:  Indira D Kitulwatte; Patrick J H Kim; Michael S Pollanen
Journal:  Forensic Sci Med Pathol       Date:  2009-11-29       Impact factor: 2.007

Review 4.  Myocarditis.

Authors:  Lori A Blauwet; Leslie T Cooper
Journal:  Prog Cardiovasc Dis       Date:  2010 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 8.194

5.  Transient atrial inflammation in a murine model of Coxsackievirus B3-induced myocarditis.

Authors:  Linghe Wu; Mitchell D Fiet; Daan R Raaijmakers; Linde Woudstra; Albert C van Rossum; Hans W M Niessen; Paul A J Krijnen
Journal:  Int J Exp Pathol       Date:  2022-04-01       Impact factor: 2.793

6.  Complete Atrioventricular Block Associated with Pembrolizumab-induced Acute Myocarditis: The Need for Close Cardiac Monitoring.

Authors:  Yumi Katsume; Tsuyoshi Isawa; Yukihiro Toi; Ryo Fukuda; Yasuteru Kondo; Shunichi Sugawara; Tatsushi Ootomo
Journal:  Intern Med       Date:  2018-06-06       Impact factor: 1.271

7.  Sudden cardiac death caused by myocarditis in persons aged 1-49 years: a nationwide study of 14 294 deaths in Denmark.

Authors:  Thomas Hadberg Lynge; Trine Skov Nielsen; Bo Gregers Winkel; Jacob Tfelt-Hansen; Jytte Banner
Journal:  Forensic Sci Res       Date:  2019-08-19

Review 8.  Myocarditis is rare in COVID-19 autopsies: cardiovascular findings across 277 postmortem examinations.

Authors:  Marc K Halushka; Richard S Vander Heide
Journal:  Cardiovasc Pathol       Date:  2020-10-23       Impact factor: 2.185

9.  RLMD-PA: A Reinforcement Learning-Based Myocarditis Diagnosis Combined with a Population-Based Algorithm for Pretraining Weights.

Authors:  Seyed Vahid Moravvej; Roohallah Alizadehsani; Sadia Khanam; Zahra Sobhaninia; Afshin Shoeibi; Fahime Khozeimeh; Zahra Alizadeh Sani; Ru-San Tan; Abbas Khosravi; Saeid Nahavandi; Nahrizul Adib Kadri; Muhammad Mokhzaini Azizan; N Arunkumar; U Rajendra Acharya
Journal:  Contrast Media Mol Imaging       Date:  2022-06-30       Impact factor: 3.009

10.  Sudden unexpected death related to enterovirus myocarditis: histopathology, immunohistochemistry and molecular pathology diagnosis at post-mortem.

Authors:  Imed Gaaloul; Samira Riabi; Rafik Harrath; Mark Evans; Nidhal H Salem; Souheil Mlayeh; Sally Huber; Mahjoub Aouni
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2012-09-11       Impact factor: 3.090

  10 in total

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