Myocarditis

Background

  • Inflammatory (dilated) cardiomyopathy caused by necrosis of myocytes
  • Causes:
    • Infectious agents
      • Enterovirus (Coxsackie B) and adenovirus most common
      • Influenza A and B
      • Hepatitis B
      • Beta-hemolytic streptococcus
      • Mycoplasma
      • Mumps
      • CMV
      • Toxoplasma
      • Chagas (most common cause worldwide
      • Trichinosis
      • Diphtheria
      • Lyme disease
    • Drugs
      • Doxorubicin
      • Cocaine

Phases

  • Acute
    • Viral cytotoxicity and focal necrosis
  • Subacute
    • Host's humoral/immune response leading to further cell injury
  • Chronic
    • Diffuse myocardial fibrosis and cardiac dysfunction

Clinical Features

  • Typically young/few risk factors for CAD
    • Age at onset typically between 20-50 years
  • Chest pain
  • No sensitive symptom or sign but can have flu like syndrome: fever, fatigue, myalgia, nausea and vomiting; tachycardia (out of proportion to fever), tachypnea, new onset CHF
  • In Peds: grunting, retractions, ronchi. Infants may have fulminant syndrome: Fever, cyanosis, respiratory distress, tachycardia, cardiac failure, ventricular dysrhythmias
  • May have pericardial friction rub
  • Consider this diagnosis in the septic-appearing patient who gets WORSE after receiving IV fluids.

Differential Diagnosis

Consider other causes of CHF

Chest pain

Critical

Emergent

Nonemergent

Evaluation

  • ECG: Sinus tachycardia, low voltages, prolonged QTc, AV block, Acute MI pattern (Usually >1 vessel distribution)
  • TropI: Elevated
  • Echo: Decreased LVEF, global hypokinesis, regional wall motion abnormalities
  • Contrast MR
  • Nuclear Study: Widespread uptake indicating myocyte necrosis
  • Viral titers
  • Endocardial biopsy: Gold standard

Management

  • Acute Phase: Antiviral agents may be effective with replicating virus: Pleconaril/Ribavirin
  • Subacute: Studies have not shown efficacy of immunosupressants. Peds: High dose IVIG
  • Chronic: Treat CHF symptoms, Ventricular Assist Devices (VAD), cardiac transplant

Disposition

  • If CHF: Admit to monitored bed; ICU for hemodynamic instability
  • Fulminant myocarditis has best prognosis
  • Mortality: 20% 1 yr/ 50% 5 yr
  • Children with 70% survival rate at 5 yrs

Complications

  • Ventricular dysrhythmias
  • LV anneurysm
  • CHF

See Also

References