| Literature DB >> 35937951 |
Giuseppe Annoni1, Francesca De Rienzo2, Sandra Nonini3, Lorenza Pugni4, Stefano M Marianeschi5, Luigi Mauri1, Italo Gatelli2, Lucia Mauri6, Francesca Aresta3, Manuela Bramerio7, Gaia Francescato4, Cristina Carro5, Irene Picciolli4, Alice Nava8, Diana Fanti8, Cristina Galli9, Fabio Mosca4, Stefano Martinelli2, Enrico Ammirati10.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35937951 PMCID: PMC9352904 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcha.2022.101093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc ISSN: 2352-9067
Fig. 1Enterovirus acute myocarditis. (A) ECG revealed sinus rhythm of 150 beats per minute, Q waves, ST elevation in lateral leads, and ST depression in anterior leads (B) Echocardiography showed a dilated and thickened left ventricle (LV) with severe systolic dysfunction, left coronary artery dilatation (LCA, arrow) with a discrete aneurysm, and pericardial effusion (*). (C) The staining of the whole heart at autopsy revealed diffuse staining for leukocyte common antigen (CD45) indicating a massive lympho-monocytic infiltration mainly involving the LV. (D) Hematoxylin-eosin showed inflammatory infiltrates with areas of myocardial necrosis; (original magnification 200x). (E) The staining for CD3 revealed the presence of T-lymphocytes in the inflammatory infiltrate further confirming the diagnosis of active myocarditis (original magnification 200x). LA indicates left atrium; RA, right atrium, RV, right ventricle.