384 research outputs found
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Mitral Valve Prolapse and Sudden Cardiac Death- First Study Showing Objective Measurements of the Mitral Valve at Autopsy
Sudden Death and Left Ventricular Involvement in Arrhythmogenic Cardiomyopathy
BACKGROUND: Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (ACM) is an inherited heart muscle disorder characterized by myocardial fibrofatty replacement and an increased risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD). Originally described as a right ventricular disease, ACM is increasingly recognized as a biventricular entity. We evaluated pathological, genetic, and clinical associations in a large SCD cohort. METHODS: We investigated 5205 consecutive cases of SCD referred to a national cardiac pathology center between 1994 and 2018. Hearts and tissue blocks were examined by expert cardiac pathologists. After comprehensive histological evaluation, 202 cases (4%) were diagnosed with ACM. Of these, 15 (7%) were diagnosed antemortem with dilated cardiomyopathy (n=8) or ACM (n=7). Previous symptoms, medical history, circumstances of death, and participation in competitive sport were recorded. Postmortem genetic testing was undertaken in 24 of 202 (12%). Rare genetic variants were classified according to American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics criteria. RESULTS: Of 202 ACM decedents (35.4±13.2 years; 82% male), no previous cardiac symptoms were reported in 157 (78%). Forty-one decedents (41/202; 20%) had been participants in competitive sport. The adjusted odds of dying during physical exertion were higher in men than in women (odds ratio, 4.58; 95% CI, 1.54-13.68; P=0.006) and in competitive athletes in comparison with nonathletes (odds ratio, 16.62; 95% CI, 5.39-51.24; P<0.001). None of the decedents with an antemortem diagnosis of dilated cardiomyopathy fulfilled definite 2010 Task Force criteria. The macroscopic appearance of the heart was normal in 40 of 202 (20%) cases. There was left ventricular histopathologic involvement in 176 of 202 (87%). Isolated right ventricular disease was seen in 13%, isolated left ventricular disease in 17%, and biventricular involvement in 70%. Among whole hearts, the most common areas of fibrofatty infiltration were the left ventricular posterobasal (68%) and anterolateral walls (58%). Postmortem genetic testing yielded pathogenic variants in ACM-related genes in 6 of 24 (25%) decedents. CONCLUSIONS: SCD attributable to ACM affects men predominantly, most commonly occurring during exertion in athletic individuals in the absence of previous reported cardiac symptoms. Left ventricular involvement is observed in the vast majority of SCD cases diagnosed with ACM at autopsy. Current Task Force criteria may fail to diagnose biventricular ACM before death
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Fatal Case of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in a Donor Heart: A Case Report
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is a genetically determined heart muscle disease, and patients are at an increased risk for sudden cardiac death.
We report the case of a 39-year-old White man who was found dead at home unexpectedly. He had a cardiac transplant for congenital heart disease at the age of 12 and his condition was maintained with immunosuppression ever since with good cardiac function and right bundle branch block.
At autopsy, the heart was enlarged with a weight of 591 g and had fibrous adhesions of the pericardium with endothelialized sutures in the atria and great vessels in keeping with heart transplant. There was focal septal hypertrophy noted on short axis cut. There was diffuse thickening of the coronary arteries, but no significant stenosis was noted.
On microscopic examination of the heart, sections of right and left ventricle showed myocyte hypertrophy with extensive widespread myocyte disarray and replacement fibrosis. The histologic appearance was that of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, which was responsible for his sudden unexpected death.
This postmortem diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in a transplanted heart has major implications for the donor family because of the inherited nature of the condition. Follow-up with the donor family is essential in this unique case.
This case highlights the importance of autopsy in transplant death cases. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in the donor heart most likely did not manifest phenotypically at the time of transplant in this case because the majority present in adolescence and early adulthood, rarely in childhood. This is first report of such a case
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Mitral annular disjunction: a ubiquitous finding with or without mitral valvar prolapse.
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Obesity Cardiomyopathy in Sudden Cardiac Death
Background
Obesity cardiomyopathy (OCM) can be associated with sudden cardiac death (SCD) but its pathologic features are not well described.
Objectives
The objective of this study was to characterize the clinical and pathological features of OCM associated with SCD.
Methods
This was a retrospective case control autopsy study. OCM was identified by an increased heart weight (>550 g in males; >450 g in females) in individuals with obesity (body mass index [BMI] â„30 kg/m2) in the absence of other causes. Cases of OCM with SCD were compared to sex and age matched SCD controls with obesity or with normal weight (BMI 18.5-24.9 kg/m2) and morphologically normal hearts. Autopsy measures included: heart weight, atrial dimensions, ventricular wall thickness, and epicardial adipose tissue. Fibrosis was assessed microscopically.
Results
Of 6,457 SCD cases, 53 cases of OCM were identified and matched to 106 controls with obesity and 106 normal weight controls. The OCM mean age at death of individuals with OCM was 42 ± 12 with a male predominance (n = 34, 64%). Males died younger than females (40 ± 13 vs 45 ± 10, P = 0.036). BMI was increased in OCM cases compared to controls with obesity (42 ± 8 vs 35 ± 5). The average heart weight was 598 ± 93 g in OCM. There were increases in right and left ventricular wall thickness (all P < 0.05) in OCM cases compared to controls. Right ventricular epicardial fat was increased in OCM compared to normal weight controls only. Left ventricular fibrosis was identified in 7 (13%) cases.
Conclusions
OCM may be a specific pathological entity associated with SCD. It is most commonly seen in young males with increased BMI
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Sudden Cardiac Death in Adolescents: Insights from a Large United Kingdom Registry
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Morphometric characterization of collagen and fat in normal ventricular myocardium.
OBJECTIVE: We used automated image analysis software to determine the proportion of collagen, fat, and myocytes across six histological regions of normal ventricular myocardium. METHODS: Twenty-nine non-cardiac death cases referred to our national cardiac pathology center were included in this study. Whole hearts were macroscopically and microscopically normal following expert histopathological evaluation. Tissue sections from the right ventricular outflow tract, right ventricle (RV), anterior interventricular septum (IVS), posterior IVS, anterior left ventricle (LV), and posterior LV were stained with Picrosirius red for collagen and scanned using a high-resolution slide scanner. Quantification of collagen, fat, and myocyte proportions was performed using Visiopharm software after automated exclusion of perivascular collagen. RESULTS: The majority of decedents were male (25/29; 86%) with a mean age at death of 32.1 ± 9.9 (range 18-54) and mean BMI 28.7 ± 7.3. We report predicted values (collagen %, fat %, myocytes %) for cardiac tissue composition within the RV, IVS, and LV (including epicardial and endocardial layers). The proportion of collagen and fat were higher in the RV compared with the LV (ratios 1.61 [1.45-1.78]; 2.63 [1.99-3.48], respectively) and RV compared with the IVS (ratios 1.77 [1.60-1.97]; 8.41[6.35-11.13], respectively). The ratio of epicardial versus endocardial fat was increased in both ventricles (RV: ratio 4.49 [3.67-5.49]; LV: ratio 3.46 [2.49-4.81]). In multivariable analysis, there was no significant association between collagen or fat proportion and sex (p=0.12; p=0.08, respectively), age at death (p=0.36; p=0.23, respectively), or BMI (p=0.45; p=0.43, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings provide location and sex-specific proportions of myocardial histological tissue composition that may aid quantitative evaluation of pathology in future studies
Sudden cardiac death with morphologically normal heart: always do toxicology
Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is defined as natural unexpected death occurring within <1 hour in witnessed cases and within <24 hours of last being seen alive in unwitnessed cases
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