| Literature DB >> 28532506 |
Ersin Saricam1,2, Yasemin Saglam3, Tuncay Hazirolan4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Myocardial involvement in young adults has various causes. Acute myopericarditis is one of the myocardial involvements in young adults. It is easy to confuse with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction because of the electrocardiographic features. This study aims to investigate a number of imaging techniques and clinical features for acute myopericarditis in young adults (<30 years of age).Entities:
Keywords: Acute myopericarditis; Echocardiography; Myocardial focal echobright
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28532506 PMCID: PMC5440907 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-017-0564-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 2MRI imaging in the short axis. Posterior and posterolateral late gadolinium enhancement in the subepicardial region in with acute myopericarditis (Patient 1)
Differential diagnosis in acute myopericarditis
| Acute myopericarditis | |
|---|---|
| ECG | ST concave elevation, PR depression except for aVR |
| History | Upper respiratory tract infection |
| Type of pain | Mixed |
| Cardiac MRI (T2) | Myocyte damage, edema, inflammation |
| Endo-myocardial biopsy (acute phase) | Interstitial edema, myocyte damage, lymphocytic infiltration |
| Coronary angiography | Normal |
| Echocardiography | Transient left ventricular wall thickening, pericardial effusion, tissue Doppler abnormality, detection of regional contractile and perfusion abnormalities in strain imaging/mapping and myocardial contrast echocardiography, myocardial heterogeneity |
| Therapy | Anti-inflammatory treatment |
The causes of the myocardial involvement in young adults (Group II) (<30 years age)
| Patients in Group II |
|
|---|---|
| Slow coronary artery | 38 |
| Coronary atherosclerosis | 10 |
| Vasculitis | 5 |
| Spontan coronary dissection | 4 |
| Coronary thrombosis | 4 |
| Drug abuse | 3 |
| Trauma | 2 |
| Anxieties induced coronary spasm | 2 |
| Coronary artery abnormalities | 2 |
| Mad honey intoxication | 1 |
Fig. 3Test results for myocardial focal echobright and pericardial effusion
Fig. 1Focal echobright sign in posterolateral wall in echocardiography in acute myopericarditis (Patient 1)
Patient characteristics
| Acute myopericarditis group ( | STEMI group ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age range | 18–30 | 20–30 |
| Male/Female | 49/28 | 53/17 |
| ECG abnormality | ST elevation, PR elevation | ST elevation |
| Upper respiratory tract infection history | yes | no |
| Pain type | mixt (sharp and pressure like) | typical |
| Pericardial friction rub | 35/77 | 2/70 |
| Pericardial effusion | 83% | 7 (10%) |
| Segmental wall motion abnormality -ECG | Incompatible | compatible |
| Myocardial heterogeneity | yes | none |