| Literature DB >> 35887887 |
Milan Radovanovic1,2, Marija Petrovic3, Michel K Barsoum1,4, Charles W Nordstrom1,2, Andrew D Calvin1,4, Igor Dumic1,2, Dorde Jevtic3,5, Richard D Hanna1,4.
Abstract
Myopericarditis is a rare complication of influenza infection. The presentation may range from mild and frequently unrecognized, to fulminant and potentially complicated by cardiogenic and/or obstructive shock (tamponade), which is associated with high mortality. We performed a review of literature on all influenza pericarditis and myopericarditis cases according to PRISMA guidelines using the PubMed search engine of the Medline database. Seventy-five cases of influenza myopericarditis and isolated pericarditis were identified from 1951 to 2021. Influenza A was reported twice as often as influenza B; however, influenza type did not correlate with outcome. Men and elderly patients were more likely to have isolated pericarditis, while women and younger patients were more likely to have myopericarditis. All included patients had pericardial effusion, while 36% had tamponade. Tamponade was more common in those with isolated pericarditis (41.2%) than myopericarditis (13.8%). Cardiogenic shock was more common in patients with myopericarditis (64%), with an overall mortality rate of 14.7%. Nearly 88% of the recovered patients remained without long-term complications reported.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac tamponade; influenza; myocarditis; myopericarditis; pericarditis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35887887 PMCID: PMC9316162 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11144123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1Flow chart of methodology and literature selection according to the PRISMA guidelines.
The epidemiology, demographics, clinical presentation, diagnostic findings, and outcome of influenza myopericarditis cases.
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| Adult | 55 (73.3%) | 28:27 | 18–75 | 40.5 ± 14.8 |
| Pediatric | 20 (26.7%) | 3:17 | 0.25–17 | 9.7 ± 4.9 |
| Total | 75 (100%) | 31:44 | 0.25–75 | 32.3 ± 18.8 |
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| Adult | ||||
| Not present | 26 (47.3%) | |||
| Present | 29 (52.7%) | |||
| Hypertension and alcohol use | each in 4 (7.3%) | |||
| CAD (previous MI), advanced CKD/ESRD, asthma, tobacco dependence | each in 3 (5.4%) | |||
| Obesity and hyperlipidemia | each in 2 (3.6%) | |||
| Previous Influenza B myocarditis (16 years prior), DMT2, hypothyroidism, primary biliary cirrhosis, diverticulitis, breast cancer, SLE, MS, TBI, Down syndrome, schizophrenia, marijuana and cocaine use, previous infection with TB, syphilis, gonorrhea | each in 1 (3.6%) | |||
| Pediatric | ||||
| Not present | 17 (85%) | |||
| Present | 3 (15%) | |||
| Viral myocarditis | 1 (5%) | |||
| Asthma | 1 (5%) | |||
| Rheumatic fever | 1 (5%) | |||
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| Febrile (“flu-like”) illness | 71 (94.7%) | Reported–66 (88%) | 1–42 | 6.9 ± 6.4 |
| Tachycardia | 62 (82.7%) | Not reported–9 (12%) | ||
| Hypotension/Shock | 54 (72%) | |||
| Chest pain | 36 (48%) | |||
| Dyspnea | 34 (45.3%) | |||
| Pericardial friction rub | 15 (20%) | |||
| Elevated JVP | 10 (13.3%) | |||
| Abdominal pain | 8 (10.7%) | |||
| Muffled heart sound | 8 (10.7%) | |||
| Nausea/vomiting | 8 (10.7%) | |||
| Collapse/syncope | 6 (8%) | |||
| Pulsus paradoxus | 5 (6.7%) | |||
| Altered mental status/lethargy | 5 (6.7%) | |||
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| Normal or not reported | 14 (18.7%) | |||
| Abnormal | ||||
| ST elevation and/or PR depression | 26 (42.6%) | |||
| Low voltage QRS complexes | 22 (36.1%) | |||
| Electrical alternans | 2 (3.3%) | |||
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| Performed | 62 (82.7%) | |||
| Decreased EF or diffuse hypokinesis | 42 (67.7%) | |||
| Pericardial effusion | ||||
| Without tamponade physiology | 38 (61.3%) | |||
| With tamponade physiology | 24 (38.7%) | |||
| Not reported, although authors reported pericardial effusion in all 13 cases with tamponade in 3 cases | 13 (17.3%) | |||
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| Antivirals (Oseltamivir/Peramivir/Zanamivir) | 33 (44%)/6 (8%)/3 (5%) | |||
| NSAIDs | 13 (17.3%) | |||
| Corticosteroids | 12 (16%) | |||
| Colchicine | 8 (10.7%) | |||
| IVIG | 8 (10.7%) | |||
| Circulatory support | ||||
| Inotropes/vasopressors | 44 (58.7%) | |||
| Mechanical | ||||
| ECMO | 18 (24%) | |||
| Intra-aortic balloon pump | 9 (12%) | |||
| Ventricular assist device | 7 (9.3%) | |||
| Pericardiocentesis | 28 (37.3%) | |||
| Pericardiectomy/Pericardial window | 4 (5.3%)/3 (4%) | |||
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| Recovered | 63 (84%) | |||
| Long-term complications | ||||
| No | 55 (87.3%) | |||
| Yes | 8 (12.7%) | |||
| Chronic (constrictive) pericarditis | 3 (4.8%) | |||
| Recurrent pericardial effusions | 2 (3.2%) | |||
| Mild LV dysfunction | 2 (3.2%) | |||
| LV pseudoaneurysm | 1 (1.6%) | |||
| Awaiting transplant | 1 (1.3%) | |||
| Deceased | 11 (14.7%) |
Legend: CKD—chronic kidney disease; ESRD—end-stage renal disease; CAD—coronary artery disease; MI—myocardial infarction; DMT2—diabetes mellitus type 2; SLE—systemic lupus erythematosus; MS—multiple sclerosis; TBI—traumatic brain injury; TB—tuberculosis; JVP—jugular venous pressure; EF—ejection fraction; NSAIDs—non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; IVIG—intravenous immunoglobulin; ECMO—extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; LV—left ventricular.
Characteristics and comparison of myopericarditis vs isolated pericarditis cases.
| Myopericarditis | vs. | Pericarditis | |
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| 58 (77.3%) | 17 (22.7%) | |
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| Cardiogenic ( | Obstructive (tamponade) ( | |
| Combined ( | |||
| Obstructive (tamponade) ( | |||
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| Female | Male ( | |
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| Younger patients (30 ± 19 years) | Older patients (39 ± 19 years; | |
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| No impact ( | No impact ( | |
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| Tachycardia and hypotension (shock) ( | Pericardial friction rub ( | |
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| 44 (75.7%) | 1 (5.9%) | |
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| 24 (41.4%) | None | |
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| 11 ( | None |
Figure 2Influenza type distribution over years, with a notably higher incidence of reported cases during and after the 2009 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic.
Figure 3Influenza type and subtype distribution.
Histopathologic findings of myocardial tissue.
| Reference | Age/Sex | Influenza Type | Sampling | Histopathology |
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| 35 M | Influenza A | EMB | Minimal inflammatory infiltrate, CD3-positive cells | |
| 14 F | Influenza A (H3N2) | Autopsy | Myocardial necrosis with contraction bands and interstitial edema with an abundant mononuclear inflammatory infiltrate | |
| 57 F | Influenza B | Autopsy | Myocardial necrosis with infiltration of CD3-positive lymphocytes | |
| 22 F | Influenza B | EMB | Myocardial necrosis through complement-mediated cellular injury without evidence of interstitial infiltrates | |
| 19 M | Influenza A (H1N1) | Autopsy | Extensive zones of necrosis with degenerative cardiomyocytes and inflammatory neutrophilic and lymphocytic infiltrate | |
| 8 F | Influenza A (H1N1) | Autopsy | Widespread contraction band myofiber necrosis with increased interstitial cellularity (mostly CD68-positive monocytes and CD8-positive T lymphocytes and no eosinophils) | |
| 17 F | Influenza A (H1N1) | Tissue sampling at the time of VAD placement | Extensive myocyte necrosis with the confirmation of viral particles by electron microscopy | |
| 36 M | Influenza A (H1N1) | Autopsy | Myocardial interstitium exhibited edema and an inflammatory infiltrate, rich in lymphocytes and macrophages | |
| 5 F | Influenza B | Autopsy | Moderate interstitial infiltration of lymphocytes, as well as neutrophils and eosinophils, were found. Influenza B RNA was detected in cardiac tissue | |
| 11 F | Influenza A (H1N1) | Autopsy | Mild inflammation, modest infiltration of histiocytes (CD68-positive), and myocellular necrosis | |
| 18 M | Influenza A | Autopsy | Cardiac myocyte hypertrophy and a patchy lymphohistiocytic infiltrate in perivascular areas associated with interstitial edema. Focal contraction-band myocyte necrosis and scattered intravascular fibrin thrombi | |
| 4 F | Influenza B | EMB | Mildly congested myocardium, with interstitial fibrosis and rare lymphocytes. Electron microscopy showed mildly pleomorphic mitochondria and the absence of viral inclusions | |
| 75 M | Influenza A | Autopsy | Marked inflammatory cell infiltration, mainly composed of mononuclear cells, with myocardial degeneration and necrosis, and interstitial edema | |
| 30 F | Influenza A | Tissue sampling at the time of VAD placement | Focal interstitial fibrosis, diffuse lymphocytic infiltrate | |
| 11 F | Influenza A (H3N2) | Autopsy | Transmural, sparse, patchy infiltrates of lymphocytes and neutrophils associated with myocyte necrosis and nuclear debris |
Legend: EMB—Endomyocardial biopsy; VAD—Ventricular assist device.
Fatal influenza myopericarditis cases.
| Reference | Age/Sex | Co-morbidities | Presenting Symptoms | Symptom Duration | Influenza Type | Cardiac Involvement | Cardiogenic Shock | Cardiac Tamponade | Pericardial Drainage | Medical Management | Circulatory Support | Time to Death |
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| 23 F | None | AFI, dyspnea, | 3 days | Influenza A (H1N1) | Myopericarditis | Yes | No | No | Oseltamivir | Vasopressors/inotropes | 1 day | |
| 14 F | None | AFI, dyspnea, collapse | not reported | Influenza A (H3N2) | Myopericarditis | Yes | Yes | No | None | Vasopressors/inotropes | 1 day | |
| 57 F | None | AFI, dyspnea, AMS | 7 days | Influenza B | Myopericarditis | No | Yes | Pericardiocentesis (90 mL) | Not reported | Vasopressors/inotropes | not reported | |
| 19 M | None | AFI, chest pain | 2 days | Influenza A (H1N1) | Myopericarditis | Yes | No | No | NSAIDs | Vasopressors/inotropes | several hours | |
| 8 F | Previous viral myocarditis | AFI, chest pain, vomiting | 2 days | Influenza A (H1N1) | Myopericarditis | Yes | No | No | Oseltamivir, IVIG | Vasopressors/inotropes | 2 days | |
| 36 M | childhood asthma | AFI, dyspnea, nausea, diarrhea | 21 days | Influenza A (H1N1) | Myopericarditis | Yes | No | Pericardiocentesis (700 mL) | Oseltamivir, peramivir | vasopressors/inotropes, catheter based VAD | 18 h | |
| 5 F | None | AFI, abdominal pain | 7 days | Influenza B | Myopericarditis | Yes | No | No | Not reported | Vasopressors/inotropes | 1 day | |
| 11 F | None | AFI, dyspnea | 3 days | Influenza A (H1N1) | Myopericarditis | No | Yes | Autopsy (150 mL) | None | No | not reported | |
| 18 M | Obesity, HLD | AFI, pleuritic chest pain, mottled skin | 5 days | Influenza A | Myopericarditis | Yes | No | Autopsy (400 mL) | Not reported | Vasopressors/inotropes | 36 h | |
| 75 M | not reported | AFI | not reported | Influenza A | Myopericarditis | Yes | No | No | Not reported | IABP | 24 days | |
| 11 F | None | AFI, collapse | 7 days | Influenza A (H3N2) | Myopericarditis | No | Yes | Autopsy (40 mL) | None | No | Died before hospitalization |
Legend: HLD—hyperlipidemia; AFI—acute febrile illness; AMS—altered mental status; NSAIDs—non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; IVIG—intravenous immunoglobulin; VAD—ventricular assist device; IABP—intra-aortic balloon pump.
Regression analysis in a prediction of patients’ outcomes.
| Univariate Regression Analysis | |||
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| Variable | OR | 95% CI for OR | |
| Sex | 0.564 | 1.806 | 0.243–13.444 |
| Age | 0.931 | 1.002 | 0.949–1.059 |
| Influenza type/subtype | 0.940 | 0.931 | 0.147–5.889 |
| Tamponade (recognized on presentation) | 0.570 | 0.570 | 0.082–3.965 |
| Cardiogenic shock | 0.157 | 4.983 | 0.538–46.180 |
| Mechanical circulatory support |
| 0.094 | 0.009–0.971 |
| Vasopressor support | 0.863 | 0.755 | 0.031–18.375 |