Cardiomyopathy: Bệnh cơ tim
CLINICAL PRESENTATION
- Similar
- Most asymptomatic
- May have non-specific signs:
o Palpitation
o SOB
o Chest pain
o Generalized fatigue & weakness
o Lower extremity swelling
o Syncope
Primary & secondary: primary là chỉ có mỗi CM thôi, secondary là CM + một bệnh hệ thống
1. Dilated CM: bệnh cơ tim giãn
- Progressive dilation all 4 chambers & hypertrophy increase heart weight
- Chamber wall: flabby (nhão)
- Maybe endocardial thrombi
- Microscopy: hypertrophied + stretched thin myocytes, interstitial fibrosis (xơ, phì,
giãn)
a. Causes:
- May hereditary, often AD (titin mutation most common)
- Other causes: toxin, post-myocarditis, pregnancy, hemochromatosis (bệnh thừa sắt)
o Pregnancy PPCM
Last month of gestation/several months postpartum
Possible contributing factors: CO during pregnancy, nutritional
deficiencies, and/or immunologic factors
Maybe lethal (transplant), resolve slowly or quickly (weeks)
Risk of recurrence with future pregnancy, esp. if residual cardiac damage
o Hemochromatosis
Excess iron absorption small intestine (hereditary)
Cardiac deposition of iron in lysosomes DCM or RCM
b. Mechanism
- LV remodelling occur LV chamber change Impaired myocyte contractility &
reduce stroke volume
c. Pathophysiology
- Impaired contraction & dilation
- Valvular defects (mitral & tricuspid regurgitation)
- Atrial enlargement atrial fibrillation
d. Complications:
- Progressive heart failure death (unless transplant) – except resolve after postpartum
- Mitral insufficiency due to annulus dilation (suy van 2 lá do giãn vòng xơ – vòng annulus
là vòng ngoài cùng của van)
- Dysrhythmias
- Emboli from mural thrombi (cục đông màng trong tim
e. Diagnosis
- Physical exam
o Lung exam: bilateral crackles present on lung auscultation
o Cardiac exam: peripheral edema, elevated JVP
- ECG
o Combination of left bundle branch block & right axis deviation
o Left atrial enlargement present in mild late stage of the disease
o Can present with arrhythmias (afib, VT)
- Echocardiogram:
o LV cavity dilation (normal/ decreased wall thickness)
o Reduce EF
o Can include left atrial enlargement but usually late stage
- Cardiac MRI/ coronary angiography/ genetic test
f. Treatment
- Lifestyle changes
- Low salt intake
- Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors
- Beta blockers
- Diuretics
- Anti-coagulation
- Heart transplant
o 1 year survival is approximately 90%
o 20 year survival is approximately 50%
g. Prevention: implantable pacemaker/ ICD
2. Takotsubo myocardiopathy (Broken heart syndrome)
a. Mechanism
- Stress induced a catecholamine surge (norepinephrine/ epinephrine) stimulate cardiac
muscle cells apical stunning & vasospasm of coronary arteries
- Reversible cardiac systolic dysfunction with “apical ballooning” (phình lên ở apex)
b. Diagnosis
- Labs:
o (-) cardiac enzyme (troponin/ CK-MB)
- ECG
o Present as acute anterior wall STEMI (elevation in V2- V4) + T wave inversion
- Echocardiogram: Pathognomonic wall motion abnormality which shows apical
ballooning and apical hypokinesis with normal LV base contraction
c. Treatment: supportive care (not treatment indicated) & lifestyle changes
3. Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM)
- Risk: >30, preeclampsia, HTN, multiple gestation
- Mechanism: Auto inflammatory process in heart cardiomyocytes damage & ischemia
decrease systolic function of heart& decrease EF
- Pathophysiology:
o Cardiac ischemia Scar tissue formation
o Tissue damage arrhythmia, thromboembolism, sudden cardiac death
- Diagnosis: same as DCM
- Treatment:
o ACEi
o Beta blocker
o Diuretics
- Prevention: future pregnancy avoidance
- Prognosis: good
4. Hypertrophy CM: bệnh cơ tim phì đại (100% genetic cause)
Defect in energy transfer from mitochondria to sarcomere or direct sarcomere dysfunction
a. Causes
- Genetic inheritance
o Autosomal dominant trait for sarcomere proteins
o Myosin heavy chain or myosin-binding protein C
- Medication – tacrolimus (immunosuppressive drug)
b. Phenotype
- Myocardial hypertrophy à stiff LV (thất trái cứng) à mất khả năng đổ đầy và tăng co bóp
(filling & hypercontractile) LV à LV outflow obstruction 1/3 cases à HOCM (hypertrop
- Hypertrophy disproportionately affect IV septum ASH (asymmetrical septum
hypertrophy)
c. Pathophysiology
- Aortic outflow obstruction: (LVOT – left ventricular outflow tract obstruction)
o Bulging of IV septum into LV outflow tract beneath the aortic valve orifice
(Phình vách liên thất gần đường ra LV dưới van động mạch chủ)
o Abnormal movement of anterior mitral valve leaflet outflow tract mitral
regurgitation
- Microscopic: disarray (intracellular myofibrils, myocytes, bundles of myocytes)
- Abnormal forces result in: increase systolic force, decrease diastolic relax hypertrophy
in absence of increase work demand
- Thicken intramyocardial (septal) arteries ischemic changes angina, dysrhythmias
- Difference between HCM & LV hypertrophy
d. Screening & diagnosis
- Physical exam:
o Systolic murmur – best heard at left lower sternal border
o Dynamic murmur increase with Valsalva/ standing from sitting position
Valsava là bệnh nhân thở ra và nín thở rồi nghe
- ECG
o Increased QRS amplitude
o Left atrial enlargement
o Pathologic Q waves
o T wave repolarization abnormalities as T wave inversions in lateral leads
o Require s initial ambulatory ECG monitoring to evaluate for arrhythmias
o Must repeat every 1-2 years, even in asymptomatic patients
- Echocardiogram
o Left ventricle wall hypertrophy, diastolic dysfunction & LVOT obstruction +
mitral regurgitation
o Athletes may naturally have LV hypertrophy, but physiologic LV hypertrophy
has LV chamber dilatation and normal diastolic function.
o Cardiac MRI (demonstrate fibrosis)/ cardiac stress test/ gene test
e. Complication:
- Mitral valve infective endocarditis
- Emboli from mural thrombi
f. Treatnent
i. Lifestyle
- Avoid competitive physical activity, saunas, hot tubs as vasodilation leads to LVOT
obstruction
- Avoid alcohol
- Avoid dehydration
ii. Pharmacologic & non-pharmacologic
- Non-vasodilating Beta blockers
- Calcium channel blocker
- Diuretics (caution as dehydration) treat dyspnea
- Second line: disopyramide (Class intra-arterial (IA) antiarrhythmic drug with negative
inotropic activity may reduce symptoms)
- Heart transplant
Contraindications:
• Vasodilators such as nitrates, and phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE-5) inhibitors
• Positive inotropic agents such as digoxin
- Surgery/ ablation for the outflow obstruction
iii. Prevention
- Implantable cardiac defibrillator: Patients with HCM are higher risk for sudden cardiac
death and an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) should be placed if there is any
history of ventricular arrhythmia
- Septal myectomy:
o Reversed for patient refractory to medication
o LVOT gradient of 50 mmHg or greater
o Recurrent syncope
o Favored young because less surgical risk
o Result
Associated with lower incidence of ventricular arrhythmia
Higher likelihood of complete symptomatic relief
Associated with 0.4% operative mortality
- Alcohol septal ablation
o Same indication with septal myectomy but with increased complication
o Favor old with comorbidities
o Complication: Risk of AV block during procedure and may require pacemaker
implantation111
iv. Prognosis
- 1-2% annual risk of sudden cardiac death due to fatal arrhythmia (ventricular tachycardia)
or heart failure
- Patients with a history ventricular tachycardia have a 10% annual recurrent rate
5. Restrictive/ Reactive CM: bẹnh cơ tim hạn chế
a. Causes: genetic disorders, infiltrative (amyloidosis, sarcoidosis), non-infiltrative
(scleroderma), myocardial
b. Pathophysiology
- Some restrictive physiology: cardiac Chagas disease, hemochromatosis, amyloidosis
- Abnormal stiff myocardium, impaired filling, due to deposition:
o Extracellular material (collagen/ amyloid)
Amyloidosis:
Abnormal fibrillar protein: soluble plasma precursor
enzymatic cleavage insoluble precipitates
Deposited myocardial interstitium & walls of small blood vessels
Important types of amyloid in the heart:
o Immunoglobulin light chain abnormal clonal B cell
proliferation (multiple myeloma)
o Soluble amyloid associated protein, chronic
inflammatory disorders (Rheumatoid arthritis, IBD,
chronic osteomyelitis)
o Transthyretin, a normal blood carrier protein à
abnormally cleaved à senile cardiac amyloid (elderly)
o Infiltrating cells (macrophages/ tumor cells)
Macrophages or Myocytes enlarged with glycogen or lipid hereditary
storage diseases. e.g. glycogen storage or Fabry’s disease. (storage
disease HCM or DCM)
Malignancy infiltrate myocardium include leukemias, lymphomas,
metastatic carcinomas (eg. breast or lung)
o Radiation-induced fibrosis recognized
- Ventricular normal size
- Atrial often dilate, may contain thrombi
c. Diagnosis:
- Differentiate with constrictive pericarditis: disease can mimic RCM but due to inflammation
of pericardium -> different management.
- Ventricular interdependence is a hallmark of constrictive pericarditis
- Physical exam:
o Increase jugular venous pressure (JVP). Increase JVP during inspiration suggests
constrictive pericarditis instead of RCM
o 3rd heart sound in RCM whereas pericardial knock in constrictive pericarditis
o Decompensated RCM: ascites & hepatomegaly
- Lab
o CBC show eosinophilia in which parasite may mimic RCM
o Transferrin and iron studies can show hemochromatosis
o Serum protein electrophoresis (SPEP) and free light-chain can identify AL
o Amyloid A (AA) amyloidosis
o B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) is usually high in patients with RCM
- ECG: Low voltage in all leads --> amyloidosis (<0.5 mV in limb keads, <1 mV in
pericordical leads)
- Echocardiogram:
o Biatrial enlargement & severe diastolic dysfunction but normal ventricular size, wall
thickness, & EF
o Tricuspid & mitral regurgitation
- Technetium-99m cardiac imaging unique test to identify specific amyloidosis
(transthyretin amyloidosis)
- Cardiac MRI (there will be calcification with pericarditis
- Cardiac biopsy
d. Treatment: only symptomatic treatment
- Salt restriction
- Loop diuretic relieve dyspnea but RCM is dependent on high filling pressures
- Beta blocker Afib
- Anti coagulation if Afib present
- Digoxin (not recommnend)
- Cardiac transplant
e. Prognosis: 5-year survival rate is 60%, and 10-year survival rate is <40%.
6. Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (bệnh cơ tim thất phải gây loạn
nhịp)
- Autosomal dominant
- Defective desmosome protein intracellular adhesion & gap junction malfunction
- Cardiomyocyte apoptosis
- Phenotypic alteration of cardiac stem cells to adipocyte/fibroblast
- Replacement myocytes by fibrous tissue and fat & thinned right ventricular wall .
- Right heart failure with dysrhythmias vent. tachycardia and fibrillation
7. Myocarditis
- Clinical presentation
o Mild “flu”- like illness (palpitations, chest pain)
o Progressive, fulminant, heart failure.
o Dysrhythmias lethal (myocarditis sudden death young adults and athletes) •
o If diagnosis in doubt endomyocardial biopsy
a. Immune reactions
- Acute rheumatic fever
- Drug hypersensitivity (include eosinophiles), e.g. penicillin, sulfonamides, furosemide
- Post-viral (usually lymphocytic)
- Systemic lupus erythematosis and other connective tissue diseases
- Transplant rejection
b. Infection
- Virus: Coxsackievirus A or B, other enteroviruses, Parvovirus
B19,HIV, CMV
o Lymphocytic myocarditis (T cells)
o Not frequent cultured from heart
- Protozoa: Trypanosoma cruzi (Chagas’ disease), Toxoplasma
gondii
- Bacteria: Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Borrelia (Lyme disease) – abscesses
- Chlamydiae: C. psittaci
- Rickettsiae: R. typhi
- Fungus: Aspergillus, Candida – granulomas
- Helminths: Trichinella
- Acute lethal myocarditis dilated, flabby heart (like DCM without hypertrophy)
c. Unknown
- Unknown Etiology with granulomas:
o Sarcoidosis (collection of inflammatory cells) – systemic granulomatous disease
lung, mediastinal lymph nodes granulomas without necrosis (microscopy)
o Giant cell myocarditis – affect only the heart, large necrotizing granulomas
(macroscopy)
8. Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH)
Thickening of the left ventricle of the heart
- Mechanism: not a disease in itself but a compensatory mechanism in which the heart can
increase cardiac output in response to increasing afterload
- Diagnosis:
o ECG:
V5, V6 and avL for large R waves
V1, V2, and V3 for large S waves
o Echocardiography: Quantitation of LV size. Mild 12-13mm; medium >13-17mm;
severe >17mm
- Treatment: underlying causes, usually HTN
- Prognosis: increase risk for heart failure, arrhythmia & sudden cardiac death
9. Right ventricular hypertrophy
- Causes:
o Never physiologic
o Pathologic: pulmonary HTN, tricuspid regurgitation, congenital heart defect,
infiltrative disease (Fabry)
- Mechanism: not a disease in itself but is a compensatory mechanism in which the heart
responds to hormones, mechanical forces, and inflammatory stresses by increasing its
mass to deal with insult. Late stage RVH can be a result of necrosis and fibrosis and is no
longer compensatory to the underlying process
- Pathophysiology:
o RV failure occurs when the RV is unable to pump against increased RV pressure
and pulmonary arterial pressure
o Given the small size of the RV (compared to LV), it is thought the progression
from hypertrophy to failure occurs along a shorter timeframe
o RV failure is irreversible and leads to significant mortality
- Diagnosis
o ECG:
Right axis deviation
Dominant R wave in V1/ V2
S wave in V6
o Echocardiography:
Direct visualization of the right ventricle
>5mm RV wall thickness is considered to be hypertrophic
- Treatment:
o Underlying causes, usually pulmonary HTN
o Medicine:
ACEi/ARBs
Diuretics
Beta blockers
Aldosterone antagonist
Vasodilators
Cardiac glycosides