| Literature DB >> 23304476 |
Akira Ukimura1, Hidetoshi Satomi, Yukimasa Ooi, Yumiko Kanzaki.
Abstract
Acute myocarditis is a well-known complication of influenza infection. The frequency of myocardial involvement in influenza infection varies widely, with the clinical severity ranging from asymptomatic to fulminant varieties. The worst cases can result in death due to impaired cardiac function, although such fulminant myocarditis associated with influenza infection is rare, as shown by previous papers. Following the 2009 influenza pandemic, we reported on the clinical features of a cohort of 15 patients in Japan with H1N1pdm2009 myocarditis. In our subsequent survey of the literature for case reports or series of patients with myocarditis associated with H1N1pdm2009, we identified 58 detailed cases. We discuss here the high prevalence of fulminant myocarditis (36/58, 62%) among patients reported to have myocarditis associated with H1N1pdm2009. Mechanical circulatory support was required in 17 of the patients with fulminant myocarditis, 13 of whom recovered. We stress the need for increased awareness of influenza-associated myocarditis; such knowledge will facilitate earlier diagnosis and treatment of this fatal complication during future influenza pandemics.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23304476 PMCID: PMC3533457 DOI: 10.1155/2012/351979
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Influenza Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1380
Detailed characteristics of 58 patients with myocarditis associated with H1N1pdm2009 influenza.
| Characteristics of 58 patients with H1N1pdm2009 influenza reported in detail | Result (%) |
|---|---|
| Age (mean, years) (range) | 32 (3–72) |
| Less than 17 years (%) | 14 cases (24%) |
| Sex (% female) | 30 cases (52%) |
| Death (%) | 14 cases (24%) |
| Interval between influenza onset and cardiac symptoms (mean, days) (range) | 5.4 (1–21) |
| 1st day to the 3rd day (%) | 51% |
| Cardiac symptoms | |
| Dyspnea (%) | 54% |
| Chest pain (%) | 30% |
| Fulminant myocarditis (%) | 36 cases (62%) |
| Mortality rate of patients with fulminant myocarditis | 39% (14/36) |
| Pneumonia as a complication (%) | 13 cases (22%) |
| ECG findings on the first day of hospitalization | |
| ST elevation (%) | 34% |
| T inversion (%) | 24% |
| Fatal arrhythmias (VF, VT, complete AV block) (%) | 22% |
| Echocardiogram | |
| Diffuse or focal left ventricular wall motion abnormalities | 90% |
| Ejection Fraction (mean ± SD) | 25 ± 11% |
| Percentage of patients in whom CAD was ruled out by CAG | 41% |
| Percentage of adult patients in whom CAD was ruled out by CAG | 64% |
| Treatment | |
| Neuraminidase inhibitors | 85% |
| PCPS | 10 cases (17%) |
| LVAD | 1 case (1.7%) |
| IABP | 11 cases (19%) |
| PCPS or LVAD and/or PCPS | 17 cases (29%) |
| Mortality of patients treated with mechanical support | 23% (4/17) |
| ECMO | 12 cases (21%) |
| Biopsy | 10 cases (17%) |
| Myocarditis with lymphocyte infiltration (mild~moderate) | 6 cases |
| No myocarditis (according to the Dallas criteria) | 4 cases |
| Autopsy | 8 cases (14%) |
| Pachy hemorrhage in the autopsied heart | 3/8 cases (38%) |
| RT-PCR positivity rate for H1N1pdm2009 virus from heart specimens | 4 cases |
ECG: electrocardiogram; VF: ventricular fibrillation; VT: ventricular tachycardia; AV block: atrioventricular block; CAD: coronary artery disease; CAG: coronary angiography; PCPS: percutaneous cardiopulmonary support; LVAD: left ventricular assist device; IABP: intra-aortic balloon pumping; ECMO: extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; RT-PCR: reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction.
Figure 1Course of cardiac dysfunction and timing of intervention in myocarditis (Guidelines for Diagnosis and Treatment of Myocarditis (JCS2009)).