| Literature DB >> 29850871 |
Jelena-Rima Ghadri1, Ilan Shor Wittstein2, Abhiram Prasad3, Scott Sharkey4, Keigo Dote5, Yoshihiro John Akashi6, Victoria Lucia Cammann1, Filippo Crea7, Leonarda Galiuto7, Walter Desmet8,9, Tetsuro Yoshida10, Roberto Manfredini11, Ingo Eitel12, Masami Kosuge13, Holger M Nef14, Abhishek Deshmukh3, Amir Lerman3, Eduardo Bossone15, Rodolfo Citro15, Takashi Ueyama16, Domenico Corrado17, Satoshi Kurisu18, Frank Ruschitzka1, David Winchester19, Alexander R Lyon20,21, Elmir Omerovic22,23, Jeroen J Bax24, Patrick Meimoun25, Guiseppe Tarantini17, Charanjit Rihal3, Shams Y-Hassan26, Federico Migliore17, John D Horowitz27, Hiroaki Shimokawa28, Thomas Felix Lüscher29,30, Christian Templin1.
Abstract
Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is a poorly recognized heart disease that was initially regarded as a benign condition. Recently, it has been shown that TTS may be associated with severe clinical complications including death and that its prevalence is probably underestimated. Since current guidelines on TTS are lacking, it appears timely and important to provide an expert consensus statement on TTS. The clinical expert consensus document part I summarizes the current state of knowledge on clinical presentation and characteristics of TTS and agrees on controversies surrounding TTS such as nomenclature, different TTS types, role of coronary artery disease, and etiology. This consensus also proposes new diagnostic criteria based on current knowledge to improve diagnostic accuracy.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29850871 PMCID: PMC5991216 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehy076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J ISSN: 0195-668X Impact factor: 29.983
International Takotsubo Diagnostic Criteria (InterTAK Diagnostic Criteria)
| 1. | Patients show transient |
| 2. | An emotional, physical, or combined trigger can precede the takotsubo syndrome event, but this is not obligatory. |
| 3. | Neurologic disorders (e.g. subarachnoid haemorrhage, stroke/transient ischaemic attack, or seizures) as well as pheochromocytoma may serve as triggers for takotsubo syndrome. |
| 4. | New ECG abnormalities are present (ST-segment elevation, ST-segment depression, T-wave inversion, and QTc prolongation); however, rare cases exist without any ECG changes. |
| 5. | Levels of cardiac biomarkers (troponin and creatine kinase) are moderately elevated in most cases; significant elevation of brain natriuretic peptide is common. |
| 6. | Significant coronary artery disease is not a contradiction in takotsubo syndrome. |
| 7. | Patients have no evidence of infectious myocarditis.b |
| 8. | Postmenopausal women are predominantly affected. |
Wall motion abnormalities may remain for a prolonged period of time or documentation of recovery may not be possible. For example, death before evidence of recovery is captured.
Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging is recommended to exclude infectious myocarditis and diagnosis confirmation of takotsubo syndrome.