Literature DB >> 8205668

Clinical and prognostic significance of detection of enteroviral RNA in the myocardium of patients with myocarditis or dilated cardiomyopathy.

H J Why1, B T Meany, P J Richardson, E G Olsen, N E Bowles, L Cunningham, C A Freeke, L C Archard.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Enteroviral RNA sequences have been demonstrated in the myocardium of patients with myocarditis or dilated cardiomyopathy from presentation to end-stage disease. The prognosis of heart muscle disease has not previously been evaluated in relation to the detection of enterovirus in myocardial biopsy tissue. METHODS AND
RESULTS: We studied 123 consecutive patients with heart muscle disease prospectively. Multiple endomyocardial biopsy samples taken from all patients during diagnostic cardiac catheterization were classified histologically and were examined for enteroviral RNA by use of an enterovirus group-specific hybridization probe. Three enterovirus-negative patients with cardiac amyloidosis were excluded from subsequent analysis. Enteroviral RNA sequences were detectable in 41 (34%) of the remaining 120 patients (group A), while 79 (66%) had no virus detected (group B). The groups did not differ significantly in age, sex, symptomatic presentation, or hemodynamic characteristics; duration of symptoms was significantly shorter in group A (7.8 +/- 9.6 versus 14.9 +/- 19.0 months, P < .05). At follow-up (mean, 25 months; range, 11 to 50 months), patients from group A had an increased mortality compared with those in group B (25% versus 4%, respectively; P = .02). Mortality was also statistically greater in patients with symptomatic cardiac failure (P = .02), those with elevated left ventricular end-diastolic pressures (P = .03), and those in New York Heart Association functional classes III and IV (P = .05). Multivariate regression analysis, however, showed that only the presence of enterovirus RNA and symptomatic heart failure were of independent prognostic value.
CONCLUSIONS: These data demonstrate that the detection of enterovirus RNA in the myocardium of patients with heart muscle disease at the time of initial investigation is associated with an adverse prognosis and that the presence of enterovirus RNA is an independent predictor of clinical outcome.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8205668     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.89.6.2582

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  55 in total

Review 1.  The fate of acute myocarditis between spontaneous improvement and evolution to dilated cardiomyopathy: a review.

Authors:  A D'Ambrosio; G Patti; A Manzoli; G Sinagra; A Di Lenarda; F Silvestri; G Di Sciascio
Journal:  Heart       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 5.994

2.  Cardiomyopathy is linked to complement activation.

Authors:  Marina Afanasyeva; Noel R Rose
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2002-08       Impact factor: 4.307

Review 3.  Transformation of myocarditis and inflammatory cardiomyopathy to idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy: facts and fiction.

Authors:  Hans R Figulla
Journal:  Med Microbiol Immunol       Date:  2003-11-01       Impact factor: 3.402

4.  [In focus: Inflammatory cardiomyopathy].

Authors:  H P Schultheiss
Journal:  Internist (Berl)       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 0.743

5.  Myocardial parvovirus B19 persistence: lack of association with clinicopathologic phenotype in adults with heart failure.

Authors:  Garrick C Stewart; Javier Lopez-Molina; Raju V S R K Gottumukkala; Gregg F Rosner; Mary S Anello; Jonathan L Hecht; Gayle L Winters; Robert F Padera; Kenneth L Baughman; Myra A Lipes
Journal:  Circ Heart Fail       Date:  2010-11-19       Impact factor: 8.790

6.  Clinical future of antimyosin imaging in noncoronary heart disease.

Authors:  I Carrió; M Ballester
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  1995 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 5.952

7.  Frequent detection of parvovirus B19 genome in the myocardium of adult patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Ulrich Lotze; Renate Egerer; Christiane Tresselt; Brigitte Glück; Gudrun Dannberg; Axel Stelzner; Hans R Figulla
Journal:  Med Microbiol Immunol       Date:  2003-12-20       Impact factor: 3.402

8.  Increases in circulating T lymphocytes expressing HLA-DR and CD40 ligand in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Atsuko Ueno; Kagari Murasaki; Nobuhisa Hagiwara; Hiroshi Kasanuki
Journal:  Heart Vessels       Date:  2007-09-20       Impact factor: 2.037

Review 9.  Inflammation, ECG changes and pericardial effusion: whom to biopsy in suspected myocarditis?

Authors:  M Pauschinger; M Noutsias; D Lassner; H-P Schultheiss; U Kuehl
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2006-08-16       Impact factor: 5.460

Review 10.  Role of cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) in the diagnosis of acute and chronic myocarditis.

Authors:  Ali Yilmaz; Vanessa Ferreira; Karin Klingel; Reinhard Kandolf; Stefan Neubauer; Udo Sechtem
Journal:  Heart Fail Rev       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 4.214

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