| Literature DB >> 35070110 |
Roberto M Saraiva1, Mauro Felippe F Mediano2, Fernanda Sns Mendes2, Gilberto Marcelo Sperandio da Silva2, Henrique H Veloso2, Luiz Henrique C Sangenis2, Paula Simplício da Silva2, Flavia Mazzoli-Rocha2, Andréa S Sousa2, Marcelo T Holanda2, Alejandro M Hasslocher-Moreno2.
Abstract
Chagas heart disease (CHD) affects approximately 30% of patients chronically infected with the protozoa Trypanosoma cruzi. CHD is classified into four stages of increasing severity according to electrocardiographic, echocardiographic, and clinical criteria. CHD presents with a myriad of clinical manifestations, but its main complications are sudden cardiac death, heart failure, and stroke. Importantly, CHD has a higher incidence of sudden cardiac death and stroke than most other cardiopathies, and patients with CHD complicated by heart failure have a higher mortality than patients with heart failure caused by other etiologies. Among patients with CHD, approximately 90% of deaths can be attributed to complications of Chagas disease. Sudden cardiac death is the most common cause of death (55%-60%), followed by heart failure (25%-30%) and stroke (10%-15%). The high morbimortality and the unique characteristics of CHD demand an individualized approach according to the stage of the disease and associated complications the patient presents with. Therefore, the management of CHD is challenging, and in this review, we present the most updated available data to help clinicians and cardiologists in the care of these patients. We describe the clinical manifestations, diagnosis and classification criteria, risk stratification, and approach to the different clinical aspects of CHD using diagnostic tools and pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments. ©The Author(s) 2021. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Arrhythmia; Chagas disease; Diagnosis; Heart failure; Stroke; Treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 35070110 PMCID: PMC8716970 DOI: 10.4330/wjc.v13.i12.654
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Cardiol
Kuschnir classification (1985)[27]
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| 0 | Normal ECG findings | Normal heart size (on chest X-ray) |
| I | Abnormal ECG findings | Normal heart size (on chest X-ray) |
| II | Left ventricular enlargement | |
| III | Congestive heart failure |
ECG: Electrocardiogram.
American Heart Association Statement[1]
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| A (Indeterminate form - patients at risk for developing HF) | Normal ECG | Neither structural cardiomyopathy or HF symptoms | No |
| B1 | Structural cardiomyopathy evidenced by ECG or echocardiographic changes with normal LVEF | Neither current or previous signs and symptoms of HF | |
| B2 | Structural cardiomyopathy characterized by decreased LVEF | Neither current or previous signs and symptoms of HF | |
| C | LV systolic dysfunction | Current or previous symptoms of HF (NYHA functional class I, II, III, or IV) | |
| D | Refractory symptoms of HF at rest despite optimized clinical treatment requiring specialized interventions. |
ECG: Electrocardiogram; HF: Heart failure; LVEF: Left ventricular ejection fraction; NYHA: New York Heart Association.
Figure 1Schematic representation of the different classification systems of Chagas disease. We assumed that patients with an enlarged heart on chest radiography would have left ventricular systolic dysfunction on echocardiography in order to be able to compare all classifications.
Figure 2Note the hyperrefringent akinetic area in the basal inferolateral left ventricular wall (A) and the left ventricular apical aneurysm in the diastolic and systolic left ventricular images (B).
Figure 3Note the thrombi in the apical location in a patient with a large apical aneurysm (A) and a patient with severe left ventricular dilation and dysfunction (B).
Figure 4Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging of a patient with stage B1 Chagas heart disease. A: Myocardial delayed enhancement on 2-chamber apical slice depicts areas of cardiac fibrosis in the apical segments and an apical thrombus; B: Myocardial delayed enhancement protocol on left ventricular short-axis slices depicts areas of cardiac fibrosis in the apical and basal left ventricular walls of a patient at stage B1 of Chagas heart disease.
Brazilian consensus classification[9]
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| A | Abnormal | No LV wall motion abnormalities | No |
| B1 | Abnormal | LV wall motion abnormalities with LV ejection fraction (LVEF) ≥ 45% | No |
| B2 | Abnormal | LV wall motion abnormalities with LVEF <45% | No |
| C | Abnormal | LV wall motion abnormalities | Compensated HF |
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| Abnormal | LV wall motion abnormalities | Refractory HF |
ECG: Electrocardiogram; HF: Heart failure; LV: Left ventricular.
Modified Los Andes classification[28]
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| IA | Normal | Normal | No |
| IB | Normal | Abnormal | No |
| II | Abnormal | Abnormal | No |
| III | Abnormal | Abnormal | Yes |
ECG: Electrocardiogram; HF: Heart failure.
I Latin American guidelines[12]
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| A | No structural heart disease (normal ECG and chest X-ray) |
| No |
| B1 | ECG changes (arrhythmias or conduction disorders) | Mild contractile abnormalities with normal LVEF | No |
| B2 | Decreased LVEF | No | |
| C | Decreased LVEF | Prior or current symptoms of HF | |
| D | Symptoms of HF at rest, refractory to maximized medical therapy (NYHA functional class IV). |
ECG: Electrocardiogram; HF: Heart failure; LVEF: Left ventricular ejection fraction; NYHA: New York Heart Association.