Literature DB >> 32638896

Coronavirus Disease 2019 and the Myocardium.

José Albuquerque de Figueiredo Neto1, Fabiana G Marcondes-Braga2, Lidia Zytinski Moura3, André Melo E Silva de Figueiredo1, Viviane Melo E Silva de Figueiredo1, Ricardo Mourilhe-Rocha4, Evandro Tinoco Mesquita5.   

Abstract

Infection with the coronavirus known as COVID-19 has promoted growing interest on the part of cardiologists, emergency care specialists, intensive care specialists, and researchers, due to the study of myocardial involvement based on different clinical forms resulting from immunoinflammatory and neurohumoral demodulation.Myocardial involvement may be minimal and identifiable only by electrocardiographic changes, mainly increased cardiac troponins, or, on the other side of the spectrum, by forms of fulminant myocarditis and takotsubo syndrome.The description of probable acute myocarditis has been widely supported by the observation of increased troponin in association with dysfunction. Classical definition of myocarditis, supported by endomyocardial biopsy of inflammatory infiltrate, is rare; it has been observed in only one case report to date, and the virus has not been identified inside cardiomyocytes.Thus, the phenomenon that has been documented is acute myocardial injury, making it necessary to rule our obstructive coronary disease based on increased markers of myocardial necrosis, whether or not they are associated with ventricular dysfunction, likely associated with cytokine storms and other factors that may synergistically promote myocardial injury, such as sympathetic hyperactivation, hypoxemia, arterial hypotension, and microvascular thrombotic phenomena.Systemic inflammatory and myocardial phenomena following viral infection have been well documented, and they may progress to cardiac remodeling and myocardial dysfunction. Cardiac monitoring of these patients is, therefore, important in order to monitor the development of the phenotype of dilated myocardiopathy.This review presents the main etiological and physiopathological findings, a description of the taxonomy of these types of cardiac involvement, and their correlation with the main clinical forms of the myocardial component present in patients in the acute phase of COVID-19.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32638896     DOI: 10.36660/abc.20200373

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol        ISSN: 0066-782X            Impact factor:   2.000


  6 in total

Review 1.  Mapping COVID-19 functional sequelae: the perspective of nuclear medicine.

Authors:  Simone Cristina Soares Brandão; Júlia de Oliveira Xavier Ramos; Gustavo Freitas Alves de Arruda; Emmanuelle Tenório Albuquerque Madruga Godoi; Lara Cristiane Terra Ferreira Carreira; Rafael Willain Lopes; Gabriel Blacher Grossman; Ronaldo de Souza Leão Lima
Journal:  Am J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2020-12-15

Review 2.  Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2): a Systemic Infection.

Authors:  Aleksandra Synowiec; Artur Szczepański; Emilia Barreto-Duran; Laurensius Kevin Lie; Krzysztof Pyrc
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  2021-01-13       Impact factor: 26.132

3.  Cardiovascular Manifestations in the Pediatric Population with COVID-19, What is the Real Relevance?

Authors:  Andressa Mussi Soares; Bernardo Mussi Soares
Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol       Date:  2021-11       Impact factor: 2.000

4.  Takotsubo cardiomyopathy in orthotopic liver transplant recipients: A cohort study using multi-center pooled electronic health record data.

Authors:  Mohammad Zmaili; Jafar Alzubi; Motasem Alkhayyat; Joshua Cohen; Saqer Alkharabsheh; Mariam Rana; Paulino A Alvarez; Emad Mansoor; Bo Xu
Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2022-02-27

5.  Heart Involvement in Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome, Associated With COVID-19 in Children: The Retrospective Multicenter Cohort Data.

Authors:  Mikhail M Kostik; Liudmila V Bregel; Ilia S Avrusin; Olesya S Efremova; Konstantin E Belozerov; Elena A Dondurei; Tatiana L Kornishina; Eugenia A Isupova; Natalia N Abramova; Eugeniy Yu Felker; Vera V Masalova; Andrey V Santimov; Yuri A Kozlov; Alexander O Barakin; Ludmila S Snegireva; Julia Konstantinova; Alla A Vilnits; Maria K Bekhtereva; Vera M Argunova; Alla E Matyunova; Polina A Sleptsova; Tatyana E Burtseva; Vladimir V Shprakh; Tatyana V Boyko; Olga V Kalashnikova; Vyacheslav G Chasnyk
Journal:  Front Pediatr       Date:  2022-03-02       Impact factor: 3.418

Review 6.  SARS-CoV-2 triggered Takotsubo in 38 patients.

Authors:  Josef Finsterer; Claudia Stöllberger
Journal:  J Med Virol       Date:  2020-10-30       Impact factor: 20.693

  6 in total

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