Literature DB >> 26782339

Right Ventricular Involvement and Recovery After Acute Stress-Induced (Tako-tsubo) Cardiomyopathy.

Caroline Scally1, Trevor Ahearn1, Amelia Rudd1, Christopher J Neil2, Janaki Srivanasan1, Baljit Jagpal1, John Horowitz2, Michael Frenneaux1, Dana K Dawson3.   

Abstract

Acute stress-induced (Tako-tsubo) cardiomyopathy is an increasingly recognized but insufficiently characterized syndrome. Here, we investigate the pathophysiology of right ventricular (RV) involvement in Tako-tsubo and its recovery time course. We prospectively recruited 31 patients with Tako-tsubo with predominantly ST-elevation electrocardiogram and 18 controls of similar gender, age, and co-morbidity distribution. Patients underwent echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging on a 3T Philips scanner in the acute phase (day 0 to 3 after presentation) and at 4-months follow-up. Visually, echocardiography was able to identify only 52% of patients who showed RV wall motion abnormalities on CMR. Only CMR-derived RV ejection fraction (p = 0.01) and echocardiography-estimated pulmonary artery pressure (p = 0.01) identify RV functional involvement in the acute phase. Although RV ejection fraction normalizes in most patients by 4 months, acutely there is RV myocardial edema in both functioning and malfunctioning segments, as measured by prolonged native T1 mapping (p = 0.02 for both vs controls), and this persists at 4 months in the acutely malfunctioning segments (p = 0.002 vs controls). The extracellular volume fraction was significantly increased acutely in all RV segments and remained increased at follow-up compared with controls (p = 0.004 for all). In conclusion, in a Tako-tsubo population presenting predominantly with ST-elevation electrocardiogram, we demonstrate that although RV functional involvement is seen in only half of the patients, RV myocardial edema is present acutely throughout the RV myocardium in all patients and results in microscopic fibrosis at 4-month follow-up.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26782339     DOI: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2015.11.057

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Cardiol        ISSN: 0002-9149            Impact factor:   2.778


  7 in total

Review 1.  Cardiac Magnetic Resonance in Takotsubo Syndrome.

Authors:  Konstantinos Bratis
Journal:  Eur Cardiol       Date:  2017-08

2.  Myocardial and Systemic Inflammation in Acute Stress-Induced (Takotsubo) Cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Caroline Scally; Hassan Abbas; Trevor Ahearn; Janaki Srinivasan; Alice Mezincescu; Amelia Rudd; Nicholas Spath; Alim Yucel-Finn; Raif Yuecel; Keith Oldroyd; Ciprian Dospinescu; Graham Horgan; Paul Broadhurst; Anke Henning; David E Newby; Scott Semple; Heather M Wilson; Dana K Dawson
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2019-03-26       Impact factor: 29.690

3.  Persistent Long-Term Structural, Functional, and Metabolic Changes After Stress-Induced (Takotsubo) Cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Caroline Scally; Amelia Rudd; Alice Mezincescu; Heather Wilson; Janaki Srivanasan; Graham Horgan; Paul Broadhurst; David E Newby; Anke Henning; Dana K Dawson
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2017-11-11       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  Characterization of the Myocardial Inflammatory Response in Acute Stress-Induced (Takotsubo) Cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Heather M Wilson; Lesley Cheyne; Paul A J Brown; Keith Kerr; Andrew Hannah; Janaki Srinivasan; Natallia Duniak; Graham Horgan; Dana K Dawson
Journal:  JACC Basic Transl Sci       Date:  2018-12-31

5.  Multimodality imaging in takotsubo syndrome: a joint consensus document of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) and the Japanese Society of Echocardiography (JSE).

Authors:  Rodolfo Citro; Hiroyuki Okura; Jelena R Ghadri; Chisato Izumi; Patrick Meimoun; Masaki Izumo; Dana Dawson; Shuichiro Kaji; Ingo Eitel; Nobuyuki Kagiyama; Yukari Kobayashi; Christian Templin; Victoria Delgado; Satoshi Nakatani; Bogdan A Popescu
Journal:  J Echocardiogr       Date:  2020-09-04

Review 6.  Current Knowledge and Future Challenges in Takotsubo Syndrome: Part 1-Pathophysiology and Diagnosis.

Authors:  Elias Rawish; Thomas Stiermaier; Francesco Santoro; Natale D Brunetti; Ingo Eitel
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2021-01-28       Impact factor: 4.241

Review 7.  Takotsubo Syndrome-Is There a Need for CMR?

Authors:  Philipp-Johannes Jensch; Thomas Stiermaier; Ingo Eitel
Journal:  Curr Heart Fail Rep       Date:  2021-06-20
  7 in total

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